The Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre is a not for profit organization rooted in the protection and recovery of today’s most innocent and vulnerable – our children.
In the early 2000s, an epidemic of youth suicides hit hard in central Alberta, and the September 2015 suicide of 22-year-old Lindsey More sparked a bigger conversation about what could be done to prevent them. In response, a coalition was formed with the initial goal of providing necessary mental health resources for adolescents. Around the same time, Sheldon Kennedy – a long-time friend of Board Chair Terry Loewen – recommended that the coalition begin a Centre of their own.
Mark Jones (now CEO of the CACAC) brought together all the different organizations responsible for protecting children, and connected with community members who could make the Centre a reality. The first coalition evolved into a board to oversee operations, and a service team was created.
Together, the team renovated an old office building and designed a child-friendly space. Starting with a skeleton staff of just 3, the Centre opened in November 2017 and was working on real cases by mid-December.
Since then, the CACAC has expanded, with more than 20 core CAC staff and taking over the 3rd floor of the brand new Sheldon Kennedy Centre of Excellence. The organization has provided a number of presentations for use around central Alberta, and continues to bring awareness to a subject that is difficult – but necessary – to confront.
The story of the CACAC continues today, and the organization remains committed to changing the way that the people of Central Alberta overcome child abuse.
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