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Homes lost. Separation from family and friends. Treasured possessions left behind. It is like living through a hurricane.

A child advocate I know describes the plight of the abused and neglected children she represents in this way. There is an urgent need for help to avoid profound loss and irreparable harm. Trapped in situations they did not create, these children spend weeks, months, and even years in a child protection system that cannot, and was never meant to, replace having a family. Many people work to improve the child protection system and the children are waiting. They do not get their childhoods back. Their lives are changed forever, and we know – because science has told us – that the longer the children wait in this broken system, the more damage is done to their fragile hearts and minds. And somewhere along the way, whether it is the fifth foster home, or a parent’s relapse, some of the children break.

For the past 25 years, the Guardian ad Litem Program has committed itself to giving these abused and neglected children a strong voice in our court system. Since creation of a statewide office in 2004, the Guardian ad Litem Program has made substantial progress towards increasing the number of children represented and generating better outcomes for children. There are over 43,600 children in need throughout our state, and the Guardian ad Litem Program represents over half of them, while thousands of children go to court alone.

In order to better fulfill the need throughout our state, the Program continues to increase volunteer recruitment efforts, improve and create more effective training programs, and strengthen our advocacy in court. The recent introduction of a new, enhanced volunteer training curriculum broadens the spectrum of topics and methods for each volunteer to put to good use to improve quality of GAL advocacy.

I thank you for your hard work and your strong advocacy for the children we represent. With your help, the Guardian ad Litem Program will continue to advocate for individual dependent children, as well as for the systemic changes necessary to protect Florida’s abused and neglected children.

Angela Orkin

Angela Orkin
Executive Director, Statewide Guardian ad Litem Office

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