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On July 1, 2000, Family Counselling Services, Reality
House and Together, Inc. joined forces to establish Center for Family
Services, Inc. The merger allowed the Center to help people create
a vision for a better life, gave them hope for the future and through
the integration of services, the strength they need to overcome
obstacles.
Family Counselling Service
began as The Church Mission of Help in 1921 under the Auspices of
the Women’s Auxiliary of the Episcopal Church. It provided
casework services to troubled young women. After incorporating in
1952, the agency changed its name to Family Counselling Service.
While the agency’s goal remained the same,
the populations served changed several times over 80 years, and
included pregnant teens, migrant workers, individuals in need of
home health care, and anyone in need of counseling. Prior to the
merger, Family Counselling Service offered programs for abused/neglected
children and their families, senior citizens and their caregivers,
victims of sexual violence, and any community member in need of
counseling or family-life education. Those programs continued after
the merger.
Reality House
began in 1973 as a private, non-profit agency called Reality House
Teenage Consultation Center. Over the years, the agency expanded
to provide adult and family treatment and community prevention services,
and it became known simply as Reality House.
Reality House focused on assisting adults, adolescents
and families to overcome substance abuse through prevention, intervention,
treatment, evaluation and referral services. Prior to the merger,
Reality House offered programs benefiting the deaf and hard-of-hearing,
victims of sexual violence, teens and families infected with and
affected by HIV, and individuals addicted to drugs or alcohol. As
Reality House merged into CFS, those programs continued, and substance
abuse and mental health counseling services became more fully integrated.
Together, Inc.
began in 1970 as a crisis hotline in response to the community’s
need for counseling, advocacy, information and referral services.
As a non-academic department of Glassboro State College (now Rowan
University) student volunteers staffed the hotline. The organization
grew rapidly due to the hotline’s success and soon became
a self-sufficient nonprofit corporation. Over its 30 years as an
independent agency, Together created three additional divisions
and developed numerous other programs. As Together merged into CFS,
those programs included three statewide hotlines and four local
hotlines, intensive outpatient services for substance abuse, an
intensive after-school program, community-based outreach services
for high-risk youth and emergency shelter for runaway and homeless
youth.
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