Programs
Children's
Alliance Center

The
Children’s Alliance
Center (CAC) of Berks County
provides a child-friendly environment that welcomes abused children
and non-offender family members and caregivers. Children will be
interviewed once at the CAC. Various agencies will observe the
interview simultaneously, thereby reducing the number of interviews
and the amount of emotional stress.
Services provided
at the CAC include:
forensic interviews, forensic medical exams and case management for
the families to help them cope with the impact of the abuse. Since
opening its doors in July 2004, the CAC of Berks County has provided
services for more than 800 children.
Our partner
agencies include: Berks County Children and Youth Services; Berks County District
Attorney’s Office; Berks County Detectives; Reading Police Department;
St. Joseph’s Medical Center; Reading Hospital and Medical Center;
Berks Women in Crisis; Berks Counseling Associates; PA Counseling
Services; and, other local law enforcement
What is Sexual Abuse?
Sexual abuse is a
sexual offense against a child, such as rape, sodomy, engaging a child
in a sexual activity, or engaging a child in or promoting a childs
sexual performance.
Did you Know
...
Increasing
incidents of emotional, physical, sexual abuse, and neglect are as
real in Berks County as they are nationwide. Annually, 100 Children
and Youth Agency (CYS) staff deals with more than 1,500 cases of abuse
and neglect in Berks County.
Don't be fooled
into thinking all child molesters are:
o
Strangers or dirty old
men
-
Homosexuals
-
Mentally
disabled
-
Lurking in
alleys, parks and schoolyards
-
Addicted to
drugs or alcohol.
The
greatest risk comes from friends and family, not strangers.
93 percent of victims know their abusers: 34 percent are abused by
family members; 59 percent are abused by someone trusted by the
family.
If the abuse was by someone outside of the
family and household, report to the local or state police immediately.
A child
molester is usually:
-
A trusted adult or older teen, often a close friend or family
member.
-
Someone with access to children, such as a babysitter, neighbor or
coach
-
A skillful manipulator, willing to use any trick he or she can,
including lavish
-
attention, gifts,force,guilt,lies about the childs’s family,
threats to the child’s
-
family, or using child victims to “recruit” new victims.
Experts estimate that one in four girls and one in six boys are
sexually abused before their 18th birthdays. 67 percent of all
reported sexual assaults happen to children ages 17 and under. Despite
these alarming statistics, there are steps you as a parent can take to
reduce your children’s risk of being sexually abused.
Touching Offenses:
·
Fondling
·
Touching sexual organs
·
Making a child touch an adult sexually
·
Attempted or actual sexual intercourse
·
Rape
Sexual Exploitation:
·
Child Pornography
·
Child Prostitution
·
Sex rings- This involves one or more adults who abuse children in
small
·
Groups
·
Ritualistic abuse – sexual abuse as part of a ceremony.
Signs of sexual abuse
Symptoms of
sexual abuse may include physical and behavioral signs. Many children
who are sexually abused never exhibit any physical signs. Behavioral
signs are more common.
Physical signs of sexual abuse:
·
Difficulty walking or sitting
·
Torn, stained or bloody underclothing
·
Pain or itching in the genital, vaginal or anal area
·
Venereal disease
·
Pregnancy
Behavioral signs of sexual abuse:
·
Unwillingness to change for, or participate in, gym class
·
Withdrawal from family, school, or friends
·
Reverting to more childish or infantile behavior
·
Bizarre, sophisticated or unusual sexual behavior or knowledge
·
Reports of sexual abuse
To report suspected child abuse call
Childline
at 1-800-932-0313
CAC contact information:
Phone:
610-898-KIDS (5437)
FAX:
610-898-1161
Art Students from Antietam brighten walls
In May 2007, students from Antietam took brushes to the walls to create beautiful murals in the
Children's Alliance Center.
Click on photographs
below for larger views.

Opportunity House is located in Reading, Pennsylvania and serves residents of Berks County. Our goal is to help families and adults become and remain independent members of our community.

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