Community Partnership Spotlight: Stronger Together for Children and Youth - Jogs with Jesus

At CASA, our goal is to serve 100% of the children and families in need experiencing foster care and strong community partnerships help make that possible. 

One valued partner is Jogs with Jesus, a faith-based community committed to serving others. Through their collaboration with CASA, Elyssa and the Jogs with Jesus community have helped expand awareness of our mission and strengthen recruitment efforts. By sharing CASA’s message, collecting donations at their runs, and encouraging others to learn about advocacy, they are helping us grow the advocate base needed to ensure every child has a voice. 


As Elyssa shared: 


“We decided to partner with CASA because we have a servant’s heart for children and youth experiencing the foster care system. CASA stands up for children whose voices are not always heard, and that advocacy is something they truly need. Children represent the humility Jesus speaks of, and as the next generation, they deserve to be protected, supported, and never neglected.” 


Community partners like Jogs with Jesus help us reach individuals who may not yet realize they can make a life-changing difference by becoming a CASA Advocate. Through this partnership, members of the Jogs with Jesus community have taken steps to learn more about advocacy and answer the call to stand up for children in foster care. 


If you or your organization are looking for a meaningful way to serve, we invite you to partner with CASA or become a CASA Advocate today. Together, we can ensure every child’s voice is heard. 

By bfines March 9, 2026
In March 2025, Child Protective Services removed four young children, just 7, 4, 2, and 3 months old, from their mother’s care. This difficult step followed ongoing concerns about neglect, largely connected to the mother’s struggle with substance use, even during her most recent pregnancy. Although CPS offered support through Family Based Safety Services, the mother was unable to engage in the help provided. The children’s father was also unable to support them due to his own substance abuse and his incarceration in Bexar County Jail. Before removal, the children’s basic medical and educational needs were going unmet. They had been moved repeatedly between their mother and other relatives, leaving them without the stability, routine, and nurturing supervision every child deserves.  When CASA Staff Advocate, JoAnn Herring, was assigned the case in April 2025, she immediately reached out to both kinship caregivers to understand the children’s needs and how to best support the families stepping in to care for them. JoAnn quickly learned that the paternal grandmother, who lovingly took in some of the children, was struggling financially and facing barriers due to limited English proficiency. To ensure she wasn’t facing these challenges alone, JoAnn submitted a CFE (Collaborative Family Engagement) referral and personally provided translation support so the grandmother could access services with dignity and understanding. Throughout the case, JoAnn has witnessed moments where cultural sensitivity was lacking, and personal biases influenced important decisions; often at the expense of what was best for the children. Despite these obstacles, she continues to advocate steadfastly and compassionately for the children to remain with the kinship caregivers who have opened their homes and hearts to provide safety, consistency, and love. Although the case is not yet over, Joann’s story demonstrates that CASA’s advocacy reaches beyond the children themselves, strengthening the village of care and support surrounding them, because CASA wants children to be safe, to thrive, and to have their overall well-being protected.
By bfines March 9, 2026
Johnathan Cobb
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