
Group Homes
The children living in CHRIS group homes are
in need of counseling, therapy, support, structure, and love.
Licensed therapists provide counseling and therapy, and the
staff offers the emotional connection, support, and parenting
most of the children have not experienced in their own families.
The group homes are located in residential neighborhoods
in Clayton, DeKalb, Douglas, Fulton, and Gwinnett counties.
Children attend local schools and participate in a variety
of community activities. |
|
|
Children are referred by many youth service agencies such as the
Department of Family and Children Services and the Department of
Juvenile Justice. Each CHRIS Kids home is set up to provide individually
focused services for children (either boys or girls) who have suffered
repeated placement failures and abuse or neglect. These children
include those who were sexually abused, physically or emotionally
neglected, victims of prostitution, or exhibit self-harming behavior.
Each home provides hope and healing to six children, grouped according
to age and gender. Although a number of children have remained at
CHRIS Kids for several years, the average length of stay in 2005
was 9 months. While over half our children have no identified family
when they come to us, we work diligently with family members that
are available, try to locate other relatives and create mentoring
relationships for the children who don’t have other caring
adults in their lives.
Each year over 100 children are provided opportunity, hope and
healing in a CHRIS Kids family. CHRIS children typically have an
average of nine failed placements prior to their admission. They
are about two years below grade level. 95% are from impoverished
backgrounds and have had little or no exposure to enrichment activities.
The children require psychotherapy and a living environment that
provides clearly structured guidelines to teach them what constitutes
healthy and appropriate behavior. Unlike locked residential facilities
or campus-based treatment, CHRIS Kids provides intensive mental
health treatment in family-like homes, located in residential neighborhoods
throughout metropolitan Atlanta. The demographics of the children
vary. Presently these percentages reflect the statistical breakdown
of CHRIS children: 66% male and 34% female, 54% African-American,
35% Caucasian, 6% Hispanic, 3% Native American and 2% bi-racial.
Pictures of our homes show below show that they are like the other
homes in their neighborhoods.
Top of Page
|