Advocate Spotlight: Anita Frank

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As an advocate, Anita Frank truly is the one caring, consistent adult presence we so often talk about when referencing our volunteers.

Without Anita’s commitment and advocacy, it’s difficult to think about where the child on her case would be.

“I will never forget meeting the child I work with for the first time,” Anita said. “I was excited and apprehensive, but as soon as I met her the apprehension was gone. She became a real little girl, sweet and innocent, whereas before she was a thick stack of reports detailing a long history of abuse and neglect.”

It’s so easy for children to feel lost in the system. To feel like nothing more than a case file. But advocates like Anita give these children the hope and connection they need.

Anita’s dedicated advocacy for this young girl is inspired by a quote from Fred Rogers.

“As Mr. Rogers once said, ‘There isn’t anyone you couldn’t love once you’ve heard their story,’” Anita said.

“An important part of this is helping the children to realize how special and valuable they are, and to assure them that they are worthy of being loved.”

Anita was sworn-in as a court appointed special advocate in the spring of 2018 and was appointed to this case just a few weeks later.

While none of these cases are easy, Anita has been by her child’s side as she’s gone through so much in these short months.

Anita has been a constant, stable, loving presence at her child’s educational meetings, at court hearings, and during emergency housing placements. She’s advocated for ways to help this child overcome her trauma and move to a place of stability and healing.  

“This year has been filled with ups and downs, but I am honored to be there with her through it all,” she said, adding that she is always guiding her child to become her best possible self.

A Wilkes Barre native, Anita spent more than 25 years working locally as an Occupational Therapist, a job she now does part-time. She and her husband, Alec, are parents to five children, two grandchildren, and another grandchild on the way.

There are 440 children in Luzerne County foster care who are waiting for someone like Anita to take their hand and help them through the system.

If you’d like to make the kind of change Anita is making, we invite you to attend one of our upcoming info sessions. Visit our website and register for the session that works best for you. And please feel free to reach out to us with any questions. We’d love to talk to you about how you can help.

Service and greatness: Remembering Dr. King

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“Everybody can be great, because everybody can serve.”

On Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, I’ve been thinking about the meaning behind the above statement. Because you have the ability to serve, you can be great. Or maybe because you can serve, other people have the opportunity to be great.

Because you take your time, your passions, and your dedication and channel it into something bigger, you can make a difference in the life of someone else.

And not just a specific someone, but everyone. Because it’s more about what you do have and less about what you don’t have.

Dr. King makes that known in the rest of his quote.

“You don’t have to have a college degree to serve. You don’t have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You don’t have to know about Plato and Aristotle to serve. You don’t have to know Einstein’s theory of relativity to serve. You don’t have to know the second theory of thermodynamics in physics to serve. You only need a heart full of grace, a soul generated by love.”

CASA of Luzerne County is currently advocating for 50 children who have been placed into foster care because of abuse and neglect. There are still 400 others who are waiting for someone to serve.

We’re hosting an info session in our office on January 22 at 5 p.m. I encourage you to come by and learn more about how you can take the things that make you uniquely you and channel them into something that will make a real, lasting impact in the life of a child. Click here to register.

If you can’t make it tomorrow, we have two more info sessions coming up in February. February 4 and February 19, both at 5 p.m.

Please consider joining the other CASA volunteers whose souls are generated by love in honoring Dr. King’s legacy by serving their community.