Predecessor | Traveler’s and Immigrants Aid |
---|---|
Formation | 1888 |
Founder | Jane Addams |
Founded at | Chicago |
Type | 501(c)(3) |
Purpose | Anti-poverty Organization |
Headquarters | 208 S. LaSalle Street, Suite 1300 Chicago, IL 60604 |
Key people | Alison W. McConnell (Chair), Susan Rider (Vice Chair), Shubha Ahya (Secretary), Cynthia Fronczak (Treasurer) |
Subsidiaries | Heartland Alliance International -- Europe UK, Heartland Alliance International -- Europe Belgium |
Affiliations | Alianza Heartland Mexico, Heartland Health Centers |
Revenue (2018) | $151,557,690 |
Staff (2018) | 1400+ |
Volunteers (2018) | 1200+ |
Website | https://www.heartlandalliance.org/ |
Heartland Alliance is an anti-poverty organization based in Chicago, with a historical focus on serving American immigrant communities. Heartland Alliance devotes the bulk of its funding to initiatives that address poverty through health and housing, with further programs centered on jobs, justice, and international work. [1] Heartland Alliance's 72 programs are run by constituent companies Heartland International, Heartland Alliance Health, Inc., Heartland Alliance Housing, Inc., and Heartland Alliance Human Care Services. [1] Heartland Alliance also includes a Policy & Advocacy Team, Social Impact Research Center, National Initiatives, and the National Immigrant Justice Center. [2] As a 501(c)(3), Heartland does not endorse candidates for political office. [1]
Heartland Alliance's stated mission is to “advance the human rights and respond to the human needs of endangered populations—particularly the poor, the isolated, and the displaced—through the provision of comprehensive and respectful services and the promotion of permanent solutions leading to a more just global society.” [1]
Heartland Alliance, then known as Traveler's and Immigrants Aid, [3] was formally founded in 1888 by progressive social reformer Jane Addams. Traveler's and Immigrants Aid grew from the Travelers Aid Movement, which has been deemed the oldest, non-sectarian social welfare movement in the United States. [4] The first Travelers Aid program began in 1852 with the allocation of funds from former St. Louis mayor Bryan Mullanphy to the City of St. Louis for the purpose of assisting “bona fide travelers heading west.” [4] Starting in the 1880s, with the urging of organizations such as the YWCA, [4] Travelers Aid programs were founded in major US cities to provide protection for women and girls traveling alone. [4] However, as the program entered the early 20th century, it began shifting its focus towards welcoming immigrants to the United States as well as providing aid to all people regardless of gender, age, class, race or religion. [4]
Jane Addams’ Chicago-based Traveler's and Immigrants Aid organization was opened with the aim of providing immigrants to the United States with the resources needed to transition into their new lives.
Though Heartland Alliance's mission originally focused on providing support services for immigrants to the United States, the organization has gone on to provide healthcare, housing, and support to different vulnerable populations through the years. [5]
For instance, at the turn of the 20th century, Heartland Alliance worked to reconnect family members who had been separated from one another as they were processed at Ellis Island, America's largest and most active immigration station at the time. [5] [6] Additionally, Heartland Alliance workers served as designated emergency first-responders for individuals and families in need of housing during the Great Depression. [5] When veterans of the First and Second World War returned home from war, Heartland Alliance provided services to veterans and their families to increasing housing stability and counteract the risk of homelessness. [5] Furthermore, in the 1980s, Heartland Alliance opened housing and healthcare clinics in response to the AIDS epidemic in Chicago. [5]
In 1987, a group of physicians, psychologists, lawyers, and torture survivors came together to establish the Marjorie Kovler Center for the Treatment of Survivors of Torture in Chicago, the second ever torture survivors’ treatment center in the United States. [7] The Marjorie Kovler Center is a division of Heartland Alliance International (HAI) [8] providing mental health care, medical care, therapeutic services, case management, interpretation, and translation services for survivors of politically sanctioned torture committed abroad and their families.
In addition to providing direct services to those who have survived torture and their families, the Kovler Center provides local-level and international trainings [8] on their community-based, trauma-informed model of treatment [9] and advocates for the end of torture around the world.
The Heartland Alliance Marjorie Kovler Center is also a member center belonging to the National Consortium of Torture Treatment Programs. [10] Employees from the Kovler Center have represented the United States before review of the UN Convention on Torture. [11]
In 2003, Heartland Alliance implemented its first international torture treatment and prevention programs in Iraq and Guatemala. [7] Heartland Alliance International (HAI), the global arm of the Heartland Alliance's human rights program, was officially established as a subsidiary of Heartland Alliance in 2013. [7] Today, the Heartland Alliance has offices in nearly a dozen countries responsible for human rights program implementation. [7]
In 2007, Heartland Alliance also founded the Trauma Recovery and Training Center (TRTC). [11] It has since become an independent Kurdish, non-governmental organization and taken on the name of "Wchan", meaning "rest" in Kurdish. [12] [13] This Kurdish-Iraqi independent, non-governmental non-profit is modeled after the Kovler Center trauma care institution in terms of its service provision model. [13] Like the Kovler Center, this organization's main program works to rehabilitate survivors of human rights abuses through the provision of mental health, legal, medical, and case management services.
From 2008 to 2013, Heartland Alliance International collaborated with researchers from Johns Hopkins University on the first comprehensive mental health treatment trials in Iraq. [10] From their exploration of three treatment approaches, they determined that the cognitive behavioral Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA) demonstrated the most efficacy as a method for treating torture survivors. [14] Wchan has since adopted CETA as its main course of treatment. [14]
In 2015 the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the Chicago Police Department filed reports citing evidence of a sexual relationship between a staff member at Heartland Alliance's International Children's Crisis Center and a 17-year-old boy housed at the shelter. [15] A federal lawsuit alleges negligence regarding a child in Heartland Alliance's care who fell into a metal bed frame and needed three staples in the head. [15] A 2017 DCFS inspection complaint regarding Heartland's Rogers Park, Chicago shelter cited “improper and inadequate supervision” and fire code violations. [16]
Heartland's Casa Guadalupe campus in Des Plaines, Illinois has multiple DCFS citations of employing staff members who lack the training to properly discipline children. [16]
In 2017 an employee resigned from the Casa Guadalupe facility in response to a DCFS citation of her lack of qualifications. [16]
In July 2018, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services opened investigations of Heartland's Casa Guadalupe shelter. [17] Four children reported forced labor, including scrubbing toilets with their bare hands. [17] Other children housed in the facility reported being “roughly dragged off a soccer field,” [17] and denied medical attention after breaking an arm. [17] Four children reported an incident in which an unruly 5 year old was given injections, “after which the boy became sleepy.” [17] Heartland Alliance conducted an internal investigation following three allegations of abuse at the Casa Guadalupe shelter and found no evidence to support these claims. [18]
Since 2014, the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the Chicago Police report a total of ten runaways from Heartland facilities. [15] In 2014, a child left the facility and roamed the neighborhood, calling for her mother. She was walked back to the shelter by a neighbor. [15] Two girls ran away from Heartland's Bronzeville shelter while on a field trip to the Museum of Science and Industry in March 2016. [15] After the incident, Heartland instituted new field trip policies for the Bronzeville facility that required staff members assigned to watch specific children, the attendance of a security worker, and a headcount of children every 15 minutes. [15] A boy jumped a fence in April 2017, [15] which Heartland responded to by writing up four employees for a lack of monitoring and a failure to adhere to procedure. Illinois DCFS noted that Heartland had failed to assign each employee a specific number of children to monitor while outside, despite Heartland's policy to do so.
Covenant House is a large, nonprofit organization in the Americas, whose goal is to provide safe housing and holistic care to youth ages 16–21 experiencing homelessness and survivors of human trafficking. Covenant House was officially incorporated in 1972, and offers services including healthcare, educational support/GED preparation/college scholarships, job readiness and workforce development programs, substance use treatment and prevention programs, legal services, mental health services, services for young families, and transitional living programs.
The United Nations International Day in Support of Victims of Torture is an international observance held annually on 26 June to speak out against the crime of torture and to honor and support victims and survivors throughout the world. The first 26 June events were launched in 1998.
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The Cathedral Shelter of Chicago was founded in 1915. It began as a storefront mission of the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago, attached to the former Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Paul, providing food and clothing to the poor and homeless. In 1920, they began offering substance abuse treatment. Under the leadership of Father David Gibson, an Episcopal priest, the shelter was of great importance during the Great Depression.
The Center for Victims of Torture (CVT) is an international non-profit headquartered in Saint Paul, Minnesota, that provides direct care for those who have been tortured, trains partner organizations in the United States and around the world who can prevent and treat torture, conducts research to understand how best to heal survivors, and advocates for an end to torture.
The Arab American Action Network (AAAN) is a Chicago-based community center founded in 1995 to strengthen the Arab immigrant and Arab American communities in the Chicago area by building their capacity to be active agents for positive social change. As a grassroots nonprofit, its strategies include community organizing, advocacy, education, providing social services, leadership development, cultural outreach, and forging productive relationships with other communities.
The City Bar Justice Center provides pro bono legal services to low-income clients throughout New York City. It is part of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York Fund, Inc., a 501(c)(3) corporation.
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The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) is a program of the Administration for Children and Families, an office within the United States Department of Health and Human Services, created with the passing of the United States Refugee Act of 1980. The Office of Refugee Resettlement offers support for refugees seeking safe haven within the United States, including victims of human trafficking, those seeking asylum from persecution, survivors of torture and war, and unaccompanied alien children. The mission and purpose of the Office of Refugee Resettlement is to assist in the relocation process and provide needed services to individuals granted asylum within the United States.
The National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC) is a center affiliated with the Heartland Alliance in the United States that "is dedicated to ensuring human rights protections and access to justice for all immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers." Its executive director is Mary Meg McCarthy and it is headquartered in Chicago.
The Travelers Aid Family Services (TAFS) was originally formed as a volunteer based social service organization seeking to provide resources for the massive numbers of immigrants arriving in the United States during the mid to late 1900s. Boston's branch, Travelers Aid Family Services of Boston, worked to assist immigrants arriving at the city's many train stations and boating docks. Today, TAFS has evolved into the non-profit organization FamilyAid Boston, working to end homelessness within the city of Boston, Massachusetts.
Safe Horizon, formerly the Victim Services Agency, is the largest victim services nonprofit organization in the United States, providing social services for victims of abuse and violent crime. Operating at 57 locations throughout the five boroughs of New York City. Safe Horizon provides social services to over 250,000 victims of violent crime and abuse and their families per year. It has over 800 employees, and has programs for victims of domestic violence, child abuse, sexual assault, and human trafficking, as well as homeless youth and the families of homicide victims. Safe Horizon's website has been accessible for the Spanish-speaking population since 2012. Safe Horizon has an annual budget of over $63 million.
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Casa Padre is a shelter for unaccompanied or separated immigrant minors in custody of the U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement, a division of Health & Human Services, located in Brownsville, Texas. The site opened in March 2017, and is still housing children in 2022. The building was formerly a Walmart store. The center is run by the nonprofit group Southwest Key Programs under contract from the federal government. Casa Padre is the largest licensed childcare facility in the United States, housing approximately 1,500 youths. The former Walmart store houses boys ranging from ages 10 to 17. According to the Internal Revenue Service, the group houses approximately 5,129 immigrant children in the United States, approximately 4 percent of the unaccompanied minors in the United States today.
Southwest Key Programs is a Texas-based nonprofit organization that operates shelter facilities for unaccompanied immigrant minors and immigrant youth. It also provides youth justice alternative programming and educational programming. The organization was founded in 1987. Southwest Key reported in August 2016 that it operates in 3 states: California, Arizona, and Texas, with annual revenues of $242 million in 2016.
Unaccompanied Alien Children is a United States government classification for children in immigration custody and the name of a program operated by the Office of Refugee Resettlement to house and care for them. The term designates unaccompanied minors who are aliens, typically those who have been apprehended outside of a legal port of entry or judged inadmissible upon their entry.
The Connecticut Juvenile Training School (CJTS) was a juvenile prison in Middletown, Connecticut, that operated under the Connecticut Department of Children and Families from 2001 to 2018. Established in proximity to the Connecticut Valley Hospital (CVH), CJTS held male inmates age 12–17 with capacity for 240 inmates. In 2021, Connecticut governor Ned Lamont announced that he was considering reopening the prison to hold immigrant children.
Womankind, formerly known as the New York Asian Women's Centre (NYAWC), was founded in 1982 by a group of volunteers led by Pat Eng. In 2017, the NYAWC changed its name to Womankind. It is a non-profit organization which aims to empower Asian survivors of gender based violence. Womankind was initially a community awareness program designed to educate families about domestic violence in Chinatown, and then developed into a 24-hour multilingual hotline that now includes 18 different Asian languages and dialects. Womankind also provides Asian immigrant women confidential services including an emergency refuge, shelter services, crisis counseling, 24-hour online free multilingual hotline, welfare promotion, support groups, parenting workshops, children's services, volunteer training, community education, and some English courses. Each year, the organization receives over 3,000 hotline calls.
The Bellevue Program for Survivors of Torture (PSOT) was established in 1995 as joint project of Bellevue Hospital Center and the New York University School of Medicine to address the complex needs of torture survivors residing in the New York Metropolitan area. Since its founding, the Program continues to operate from Bellevue Hospital Center, located at 462 First Avenue CD723, New York City, NY 10016. The Program is the first and largest torture treatment center in the New York City area, providing multidisciplinary and comprehensive medical, mental health, legal, and social services to victims of torture and their families. PSOT's mission is to assist individuals subjected to torture and other human rights abuses to rebuild healthy, self-sufficient lives, and contribute to global efforts to end torture. Since its inception in 1995, PSOT has provided care to help rebuild the lives of more than 5,000 men, women, and children from over 100 countries.
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