Raising Gentle’men Participants Visit Naples Equestrian Challenge

raising-gentlemenOn November 4, 2016, Raising Gentle’men participants from Immokalee visited the Naples Equestrian Challenge (NEC) and had an opportunity to participate in equine-assisted activities. The young men experienced bathing a horse, learned how to understand horse behavior, and rode horses, some for the first time in their lives.

This was a life changing experience for the young men. Many of them tried to be tough and serious, but quickly began smiling and laughing the entire time. One young man was initially afraid of the horses and learned that there was nothing wrong with how he was feeling and that he could overcome his fear. He eventually got the courage to join the others in bathing and eventually riding the horses and was very proud of his accomplishment.

After the visit, the Raising Gentle’men advocate and young men’s teacher noticed that the students could not stop talking about the horses, and one young man approached his teacher to thank him for taking everyone to NEC. The teacher was so impressed with the change in the young men’s behavior, that he wanted to share their story with the Gentle’men Against Domestic Violence (GADV) Committee to let them know that their support of the Raising Gentle’men Program is making a huge impact on the young boys in our community.

Thank you GADV for what you do to help change lives!

With warm regards,

Bill Villafranco
GADV Chair

Giving thanks for Thanksgiving dinner!

The Shelter is grateful to the Morisey Dart Precision Recruitment Group for its generous donation that provided enough Thanksgiving fixings to feed all of the families in our Emergency Shelter and all seven of our Transitional Living Cottages!

Each Thanksgiving, individuals in Emergency Shelter prepare dishes and come together to celebrate the holiday as a group. Morisey Dart’s thoughtful gift will create many smiles and warm memories for our participants.

In addition to Thanksgiving, Morisey Dart sponsors Christmas and Easter dinners and has graciously volunteered to sponsor an entire family for the holidays.

Thank you Moisey Dart

Painting The Shelter with a dash of SALT!

The Shelter is grateful to Living Waters Church volunteers, who painted several rooms in our emergency shelter, Nov. 12, 2016, and donated $600 towards painting supplies. Thank you to Laura Allard, who coordinated the work through her group SALT (Serving And Loving Together), an outreach ministry at Living Waters Church.

CLICK PHOTOS TO ENLARGE

 

The Shelter’s vision is the world I want for my children

rachel-kerlekBy Rachel Kerlek

When the opportunity was presented to me to join the Shelter’s Planned Giving Advisory Council, I jumped at the chance.  To me, the choice was an obvious one – why would I not want to participate in a meaningful way to encourage the members of our community to support an organization as important and impactful as The Shelter?  However, there are specific reasons why I am impassioned by this new role.  They are:

  • My work.  Through my prior work as a lawyer in the criminal justice system, I was exposed on a day-to-day basis to both domestic violence offenders and victims.  I became intimately familiar with the cycle of domestic violence, and feel it is important to do my part to support those dealing with this crisis.
  • My clients.  Now, as a civil litigator, I am exposed to the other end of the legal spectrum – my cases generally involve disputes over money.   Although not an estate planner myself, I see the effects of an incomplete or outdated estate plan given that my practice often involves litigation over the distribution of assets after someone has passed away.  In many of these scenarios, the family members fighting over their loved one’s legacy may have had less to quarrel over if the individual had incorporated a planned gift as part of their estate plan instead of a general devise.
  • My family.  I am not just a lawyer. I am a daughter, sister, aunt, wife and mother. The Shelter’s mission, and vision of “a community free from domestic violence so that every home is a safe haven for the family it shelters” is in line with the vision that I have for the world that my nieces, nephews, daughter and son will grow up in.

Plan your legacy today with your financial advisor and discover how it will benefit you, your family and The Shelter. There are many creative options anyone can afford; a few are gifts by will, living trust, life insurance, retirement plans, and charitable gift annuity. For more information on planned giving for The Shelter, CLICK HERE

To discuss establishing a planned gift for The Shelter, contact Senior Development Officer Tamika Seaton at 239.775.3862, or email tseaton@naplesshelter.org.

Linda Oberhaus speaks out on human trafficking in NBC-2 News report

NBC-2.com WBBH News for Fort Myers, Cape Coral & Naples, Florida

By David Hodges, NBC2 Investigator

SOUTHWEST FLORIDA – In a Naples courtroom, recently, a bench in the far back was packed with members of the Collier County Sheriff’s Office Exploitation Unit.

The unit has been busy investigating cases of sex trafficking, and on this day, they were able to see the fruits of their labor.

“In the last three years, we have vastly been able to improve our abilities to investigate this crime,” Detective Sergeant Wade Williams said.

That progress leads to Gary Cherelus standing in front of a judge in an orange jumpsuit and handcuffs. He pleaded no contest to two counts of human trafficking and will serve 20 years in prison.

But the victims of sex trafficking often spend a lifetime trying to recover, and some never do.

“It is not uncommon for them to have been victims multiple times over and over again,” Williams said.

According to FGCU’s Human Trafficking Resource Center, recovering from life as a victim of sex trafficking can be extremely challenging.

“There’s a huge recidivism rate for minors,” HTRC Coordinator Alex Olivares said.

Tracking the recovery success of trafficking victims is difficult. But, Olivares has been able to get numbers from the Catholic Charities, which provides services for some victims.

In 2015, just 22 percent of sex trafficking victims born in the United States who received services from Catholic Charities in Southwest Florida were able to make a full recovery. That means they are living independently, holding a job and receiving services.

In total, there were 57 victims of sex trafficking in Southwest Florida in 2015. Many of them were foreign born and, according to Olivares, their success rate was much higher at about 90 percent.

The Shelter for Abused Women and Children in Naples is the lead provider for housing services for women who are victims of sex trafficking in Collier County. Executive Director Linda Oberhaus says the recovery time for these victims is almost unparalleled.

“On average, a victim of domestic violence could come through our program in maybe six to eight weeks,” Oberhaus said. “Victims of human trafficking, they’re looking at more like six to eight months and in some cases longer.”

But Oberhaus says in the majority of cases, victims aren’t staying that long. She says one of the most challenging factors in getting total buy-in from victims is an addiction to opiates like heroin.

“You can imagine these traffickers have literally kept these victims alive,” Oberhaus said. “They’ve given them just enough food. They’ve given them a place to sleep. They’ve given them just enough drugs, so they’re not hurting.”

The shelter has partnered with the David Lawrence Center to put a full-time staff member on site to provide substance abuse services. That still doesn’t solve many of the issues victims have to work through.

“It’s hard to focus on being safe and getting back on your feet and getting all the skills you need to be a productive member of society when you are deeply struggling with addiction,” Oberhaus said. “There’s this trauma bonding that takes place, so in some cases, you may see a victim of human trafficking, although she’s liberated, may end up going right back to that trafficker.”

Before Cherelus was put behind bars, he might have been the perfect example.

In court, one of his victims wrote a statement about Cherelus, read by the prosecutor.

“At one point I decided and accepted that I wasn’t ever going to get away from you and that this was how I was going to die. Raped to death or better yet an overdose,” prosecutor Deborah Cunningham read from the victim’s statement.

The case against Cherelus was only possible because she was able to run for freedom out the back door of his East Naples apartment one morning. She told police, the night before she escaped, Cherelus raped her and stole $500 from her.

Police interviews with that witness show she originally met Cherelus to purchase drugs, like heroine and cocaine. But after she ran out of money, Cherelus told her she “had to work for him (payments made by johns for sex) in exchange for the drugs she must pay him back for.”

The victim said she would have sex with four men a day for approximately $250 but see almost none of the money. She estimated there were about five women working out of his home, and that when money would get tight Cherelus would just “work them more.”

She said Cherelus would keep “plates of heroin and cocaine” around to keep the women addicted.

Police found ads from a website commonly used to solicit sex with the women. Cherelus admitted to helping the women post the ads, although, in his original interview with police, he denied being their pimp.

“Pimps, traffickers as they’re also referred to, are an exceptional type of offender,” Williams said. “They refer to themselves in as imagery and analogy as vampires, and they’re basically feeding off of their (victims) vulnerabilities.”

Williams says the background of victims is what often leads them into sex trafficking the first place.

“They come from foster families. They’re runaways. Many of them start in the commercial sex industry as young as 12 to 13 years old but even before that they were being taught the sort of life of exploitation,” Williams said.

FGCU’s numbers reinforce that trend. In 2015, five victims of sex trafficking cases in Southwest Florida were minors.

In 2016, it’s already 16. The vast majority of cases are originating in Collier County and Williams’ exploitation unit.

In 2015, CCSO conducted 28 human trafficking investigations — finding 31 victims in those cases.

According to FGCU’s Human Trafficking Resource Center, there were a total 38 Still, across all of Southwest Florida last year.

Still, Williams says Collier County is no hotbed for sex trafficking.

“If other regions and other law enforcement agencies focused efforts and had a dedicated team to address the issue, they would find the same success that we have found,” Williams said.

More cases likely means finding more victims. In Cherelus’ case, the two main victims have gone in very separate directions.

According to police reports obtained by NBC2, one of the victims is now working, and in her statement read in front of the court, she sounded upbeat about her chances.

“You can’t hurt me anymore. I’m a survivor, and I’m a recovering addict, and I’m proud because not all women make it out of those dark places alive,” the statement read.

But the other victim is currently serving the next six months in state prison for possession of heroin.

“There’s many victims that do not have success but just because they do not have success today or this month doesn’t mean they won’t and so we keep that open for them,” Williams said.

Full statement from Victim of Gary Cherelus: 

“I put my life in harms way the day I surrendered to you. I handed my body over to your care like maybe you’d do it some good. It was a lighter being passed around to light everyone’s cigarette in the room. 

You told me I was going to be your money maker. You said we were all a family and I believed you. I felt like I belonged. But I later found out I only belonged to you. 

I felt hopeless. I believed at one point I decided and accepted that I wasn’t ever going to get away from you and that this was how I was going to die. Raped to death or better yet an overdose. You were completely ruining me and I had finally reached a numbness to it all and didn’t care if I died. Anything not to be there. Anything not to hear you. Anything not to see you.

But as for today I am safe thanks to Sergeant Wade and his team. My team. You can’t hurt me any more. I’m a survivor and I’m a recovering addict and I’m proud because not all women make it out of those dark places alive. But me. I did. And I don’t ever have to go back.”

Pitbull Crew 2016 Annual Holiday Party

holiday-party-2016-4thDig out those ugly Christmas sweaters for yourself and/or your four-legged best friend and join the Pitbull Crew for its 2016 Annual Holiday Party at 4 p.m., Sunday, Dec. 4, at The Edison Country Club, 3591 McGregor Blvd., Ft. Myers.

The attire is your best Ugly Holiday Sweater. There will be a Gourmet Holiday Buffet for $20/person or folks may also order directly off the menu. There will also be door prizes and a Kissing Booth with Adopt-a-Bulls looking for homes.

Proceeds will benefit The Shelter’s pet kennel. The Club is also collecting items such as food, cat litter, leashes, collars, toys, etc. for the kennel.

For more information, contact Jeanette at (239) 784-6516 or by email at jollyrotties@gmail.com

2016 Immokalee Children’s Fair & Peace March

Nearly 500 Immokalee residents turned out for The Shelter’s 2016 Immokalee Children’s Fair & Peace March on Monday, Oct. 24, at the Immokalee Sports Complex. An annual event during Domestic Violence Awareness Month, the fair and march were organized under the direction of The Shelter’s Immokalee Outreach Office Program Director Josie Means and her staff.

Participating agencies included Collier County Sheriff’s Office Bomb Squad, Crime Prevention and DARE Car, Martial Arts Fitness Academy, Collier County Parks & Recreation, Healthcare Network of Southwest Florida, Farmworker Career Development Program, State of Florid Department of Education Florida Division of Blind Services,  FSU College Of Medicine – Immokalee Education Site, Collier County Migrant Program , Collier County Public Schools Head Start Program, Golisano Children’s Hospital of SWFL, Farmworker Association of Florida, Florida Department of Health Collier County, RCMA, Collier County Public Library, Children’s Home Society – Healthy Families, Collier County Solid & Hazardous Waste, David Lawrence Center, Cancer Alliance of Naples, UF/IFAS, Mini Moo Petting Zoo. Special thanks to DJ Bad Boy, New Beginnings, The Scoop, PACE, Ave Maria University, Florida Gulf Coast University, RCMA Dancers  and the Immokalee High School Key Club.

CLICK ON THE VIDEO TO VIEW PEACE MARCH

CLICK ON THE PHOTOS TO ENLARGE, THEN USE ARROWS TO VIEW SLIDE SHOW

Linda Oberhaus among 2016 Gulfshore Life Men & Women of the Year

The Shelter is proud to announce that Executive Director Linda Oberhaus was named one of eight 2016 Men & Women of the Year recipients by Gulfshore Life Magazine. Other recipients include Maria Jimenez-Lara, CEO of the Naples Children and Education Foundation; Mark Loren, Jeweler and Owner of Mark Loren Designs; Ingrid and Fabrizio Aielli, Owner and Chef-Owner of Sea Salt and Barbatella; Abdul’Haq Muhammed, Founder and Executive Director of the Quality Life Center; Lizbeth Benacquisto, State Senator; Lydia Black, Executive Director of Alliance for The Arts, and Dr. David Perlmutter, Neurologist and Author.

Download Linda Oberhaus story

.

men-and-women_mg_3560Linda Oberhaus
Executive Director of The Shelter
for Abused Women & Children

Growing up, there are the people (most of us) who flip-flop, change minds, switch majors, change careers before finally settling on their place in the world. And then there are people like Linda Oberhaus who seem to know, just as naturally as they know how to breathe, what they are meant to do.

“I feel I was born to be a social worker,” she says, sitting in her sunlit office at Naples’ Shelter for Abused Women & Children, where she’s been executive director since 2007.

Oberhaus was a peer counselor in high school. At 18—yes, 18—she was a volunteer rape crisis advocate, visiting traumatized women and girls in emergency rooms. “When I was 18, I felt worldly and I felt grown, but when I look back—I have a daughter around that age, and I can’t imagine her doing that.”

She went into community mental health after earning social work degrees from the University of South Florida, and then landed a job at a domestic violence shelter in Tampa, rising in the ranks until she became its executive. She’s been working in the domestic violence field ever since.

“It’s an amazing place,” she said of the Naples shelter. “We’re all about transformation and focusing on empowerment.”

One of Oberhaus’ early decisions was to expand the board of directors, creating strategic alliances with law enforcement, school officials and others in key positions to help victims. She grew its prevention programs, particularly the ‘Gentle’men Against Domestic Violence. She oversaw the construction of seven cottages where women can live for up to two years while they continue working toward independence.

“Transitional housing can make the difference between a woman getting out of a violent relationship and staying out or feeling like she has to return,” Oberhaus says. On average, women return to their abusers seven times before finally getting out.

Next up: The construction of a new shelter in Immokalee to serve victims of domestic abuse and human trafficking. Too many women, Oberhaus says, decline to seek shelter in Naples because it is too far away from jobs, schools and extended family. And, on the subject of human trafficking, Oberhaus says this promises to become one of her biggest areas of concentration. No longer are the majority of victims foreign women lured away from other countries; they are U.S. residents—teens and young women—seduced into trafficking rings.

Something surprising:
When I was 11, I broke my collarbone playing tackle football…with the boys.

Worse habit:
I’m a list person. I make a list every day, 7 days a week. I begin and end that day with that list.

Biggest influence:
My grandmother. I connected with her I guess around the age of 12… she became my best friend, my confidant, somebody I could really depend on. I can’t imagine how I would have navigated the world without her.

–Author, Jennifer Reed

The Shelter Flash Mob 2016 – Mercato

Thank you to everyone to turned out to support and/or dance in The Shelter’s flash mob, Oct. 21, 2016, at Mercato in Naples. The dance was part of The Shelter’s efforts to raise awareness during Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Special thanks to DJ Cerone and photographer Carol Fox.

CLICK ON THE PHOTOS TO ENLARGE, THEN USE ARROWS FOR SLIDE SHOW

Purple Party 2016 – Enjoy this video

Under the theme, “Unmask Domestic Violence,” The Shelter for Abused Women & Children’s NextGen Committee hosted its annual Purple Party, Friday, Oct. 14, 2016, at Paradise Wine in Naples, FL. Click below to view a video from the event!

 

 

Hands are for Helping Fun Run on Marco Island

CLICK for print version

MARCO ISLAND EAGLE
LANCE SHEARER CORRESPONDENT

Marco Fun Run

Organizer Christina Nash addresses participants before they head out.

Domestic violence, said Christina Nash, is a subject that “needs to be talked about. I want people to be aware of the services the Shelter for Abused Women and Children offers, not just for Naples but for Marco, too.”

October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month, and to mark the observance, Nash organized the “Hands are for Helping” 5K run/walk on Marco Island Saturday morning to raise awareness, and also to raise operating funds for the Shelter (SAW).

The afternoon before the event, 94 participants had signed up, but when the group headed out onto San Marco Road from the Shops of Marco a little after 8 a.m., over 125 turned out for the first-ever Marco Island event.

“This is fantastic, because we’ve never had events for Domestic Violence Awareness Month on Marco Island,” said Kaydee Tuff, communications director for SAW. “Tina wanted to raise awareness about the struggle faced by survivors of domestic violence – it was totally her idea.”
Marco Island City Manager Roger Hernstadt stood by the registration table as the runners signed in and collected their purple t-shirts, but much like the reporter he spoke to, his flip flops gave him away as a spectator and cheerleader. Local attorney Jessica Hernstadt, Roger’s wife, though, was suited up in running shoes and leotard, ready to run, as well as being a sponsor of the event.

“I have a designated exerciser,” said Roger.

“The Naples shelter is the only one in this area that provides assistance to women who are in dire emergency situations,” said Jessica. “Women come to the shelter with nothing – often with small children.”

Some of the participants at Saturday’s event had small children with them, pushing strollers ahead of them. Ray Trevino had Daniel, 3, along for the ride, and Brian Trtan pushed a tandem stroller holding sons Bryce, 4, and Jackson, 2. Out along Sheffield Avenue, on the return leg, one young woman with her stroller blew by too fast to give her name.

As the participants headed out, it was possible to see the difference between an organization that has been putting on cross country events for years, and the first-time organizers on Saturday. There was minor confusion at the start, even about just when to start, but everyone got headed off in the right direction. The runners quickly got to the head of the pack, while the walkers went at a slower pace. One young lady realized that, in fact, her hurt leg wasn’t really healed up, and got a ride back to the starting point near the Physicians Regional office from a reporter.

Domestic violence is an issue that strikes close to home, said Linda Oberhaus, executive director of the Shelter for Abused Women and Children in Naples, and too often the victims don’t speak up or take action.

“Domestic violence is the most chronically under-reported crime there is,” she said. The Collier Sheriff’s Office responded to 1,427 cases, the ones that were reported, in 2014, and since 1989, when the Shelter for Abused Women and Children (SAW) was established, they have dealt with over 68,000 victims of abuse.

To mark Domestic Violence Awareness Month, the Shelter is sponsoring additional activities, including a “Purple Flash Mob” at Mercato the evening of October 21. To support the work of the Shelter for Abused Women and Children, a 501(c)3 organization, call the Shelter’s donor relations office at 239-775-3862.

Naples Daily News Guest Editorial – Shelter to build in Immokalee

capture

Naples Daily News
October 16, 2016
CLICK for printable version

For 27 years, the Shelter for Abused Women & Children has protected and empowered survivors of abuse. Thanks to unwavering community support and strong alliances with school, law enforcement, judicial and elected officials, we have grown from a renovated four-plex in 1989 to a 60-bed, state-of-the-art campus with seven transitional housing cottages.

Our prevention, protection and outreach programs are transforming thousands of lives each year, offering hope and healing to Collier’s most vulnerable citizens.

But this is not enough.

Today, the shelter announces plans for a second emergency shelter to address a serious and growing need for services in rural eastern Collier County. Thanks to a $3 million lead gift, the approximately 13,000-square-foot emergency shelter will be located in Immokalee. The 30-plus bed facility will include a wing for survivors of domestic violence and another to meet the long-term therapeutic needs of victims of human trafficking.

Why Immokalee and why now?

Established in 1997, the services provided by the Immokalee Outreach Office have grown exponentially over the years. In 2000, the shelter was recognized as a national model for its work serving immigrant and migrant battered women. The addition of an Immokalee emergency shelter will allow survivors to be safe as well as close to their family support systems, employment and their children’s schools.

Currently, many survivors return to unsafe circumstances rather than travel to Naples for emergency shelter.

The need to serve victims of human trafficking has also increased in Collier County. Nationally, Florida ranks as one of the top four destinations for trafficking victims. While we live in a community that one might not associate with human trafficking, it is important to note that the shelter has served 38 victims of human trafficking in just the last two years. Most of these were victims of sex trafficking.

Increased awareness of human trafficking has led the Collier County Sheriff’s Office to dedicate a full-time detective specifically for human trafficking. On March 6, 2015, the Sheriff’s Office and Florida Department of Law Enforcement arrested 15 traffickers and rescued six women, some of whom were forced to perform 25 to 45 sex acts a day.

“There is no other agency in Collier County better prepared to address the short- and long-term needs of domestic violence and human-trafficking victims than the shelter,” Sheriff Kevin Rambosk said.

On Tuesday, Oct. 11, Collier commissioners and sheriff’s officials recognized this in a memorandum of understanding, naming the shelter as the county’s foremost service provider to meet the needs of domestic violence and human-trafficking victims.

To measure the need for an emergency facility in Immokalee, the shelter launched an extensive needs assessment. The study utilized data from law enforcement and judiciary sources, information from focus groups, surveys and interviews with Immokalee residents, as well as the input of 32 community organizations.

Updated in 2015, the assessment provides concrete assurance of the need for an emergency shelter in Immokalee. Like the Naples community in 1989, the residents of Immokalee have come together, recognizing the issue of domestic violence and human trafficking and the need for culturally specific services within their community. But they need county wide support to make this facility a reality.

As the shelter moves forward, we anticipate the continued, compassionate support that has created a safe haven for survivors in coastal Collier County.

It is my firm belief that every human being deserves to live a life free from violence and abuse. This is the reality we seek every day at the shelter as we work to prevent, protect and prevail over domestic violence and human trafficking. It is a reality we seek for all residents in Collier County, for if people cannot feel safe in their own home, then they cannot be expected to feel safe anywhere.

Please join us in this critical initiative.

For more information on how you can get involved, go online to naplesshelter.org/ immokalee or call 239-775-3862.

Oberhaus is executive director of the Shelter for Abused Women & Children.

LINDA OBERHAUS
NAPLES

Annual Moe’s Run benefits The Shelter

The Moe’s Corporate Run drew an impressive crowd of runners this year, raising funds to benefit The Shelter and Collier Harvest. The 3 mile run/walk was open to all employees and family of local corporations, businesses, government offices, and institutions.  The goal of the Corporate Run is to encourage people to be physically active.

Click photos for larger view.

Thank you to Bank of America Merrill Lynch

 

bank-of-america-presentation

Shelter Executive Director Linda Oberhaus accepts a $10,000 Bank of America Foundation grant from Gerri Moll, President, Southwest Florida branch.

 

Bank_of_America_Merrill_LynchThrough the Bank of America Charitable Foundation, Bank of America Merrill Lynch has supported The Shelter for Abused Women & Children by providing a variety of grants since 2005. More recently, The Shelter was the recipient of the Foundation’s Basic Human Needs Grant, which provides basic necessities for individuals and families facing complex financial challenges.

The Foundation provides philanthropic resources, employees and expertise to address the issues of hunger and lack of access to benefit resources, supportive housing and shelter. This comprehensive response helps bring significant resources to nonprofit partners serving the community – as they continue to help struggling individuals and families at their point of need – delivering integrated services and offering access to financial education and coaching.

 

 

Rosario Chavez-Apaza named Shelter Employee of the Quarter

 

rosario-employee-of-quarter-2Congratulations to Rosario Chavez-Apaza, Employee of the Quarter! This is Rosario’s second nomination and here is what her fellow co-worker had to say:

“Rosario has been here for many years. We rely on her in countless ways. Her job duties are vast and varied. She works hard to keep everyone happy. Rosario keeps up with this entire building. She is our “go to” for any emergency shelter inspections, audits, tours, cleaning, and maintenance as well. She knows what inspectors are looking for. Rosario is a main-stay in our shelter family and I feel that she deserves this award after all of these years of dedication.”

Congratulations Rosario! Thank you for going above and beyond! Your dedication and hard work has a positive impact on your coworkers and the families we serve.

Walk for the Way

The Shelter’s Walk for The Way team had a great time during the 11th Annual event, Oct. 1, 2016, at North Collier Community Park. This year’s event featured a run and a walk fund-raiser with hundreds of participants. Click photos to view larger.

Tamika Seaton on B103.9 Promoting the Purple Party

Shelter Senior Development Officer Tamika Seaton was a featured guest on B103.9 Radio Show Big Mama & The Wild Bunch, Oct. 10. Tamika discussed plans for the Purple Party, Friday, Oct. 14, at Paradise Wine. Click here for ticket information.

Dove release at The Shelter in honor of Domestic Violence Awareness Month

The Shelter would like to thank Bob and Claudia Klatz of White Doves of Naples for bringing six of their beautiful white doves to take part in a special Peace Ceremony for shelter residents, Oct. 11, 2016. Shelter Advocate Deb Alvarez shared a moving and motivational presentation before releasing the doves.

The dove is a symbol of peace and love and The Shelter wanted to inspire children and adults in emergency shelter to find peace in their life and be set free. Click photos for larger view.

 

DVAM butterflies set free at Vino Picasso, Oct. 9

Participants gathered at Vino Picasso in Naples, Oct. 9, 2016 to take part in a special painting session for Domestic Violence Awareness Month. The theme of the painting was butterflies, one of The Shelter’s symbols for freedom and transformation. A portion of the funds from the event went to The Shelter.

vino-picasso-dvam-2016-best-3

 

 

Domestic Violence Awareness Month is topic on Fox 4 Morning Blend

The Shelter Community Education & Training Manager Karen Harmon and Stewardship Manager Rebecca Thompson discuss the 2016 Domestic Violence Awareness Month activities as guests on the Fox 4 Morning Blend Show, Sept. 28, 2016