October 2024 – September 2025 Services Snapshot
- We All Rise
- 2 minutes ago
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A Year of Healing, Complexity, and Community Care
The numbers are in! This annual data snapshot captures the depth and breadth of services provided by We All Rise: African American Resource Center between October 1, 2024, and September 30, 2025.
Each number represents a person, a family, or a moment of healing. Together, they tell the story of a community rising through care, advocacy, and connection.
Who We Served
Our team walked alongside 1,120 individuals this year—survivors, parents, grandparents, and children healing together through advocacy, therapy, and culturally specific support.
New clients: 574 (first-time intakes this fiscal year)
Continuing clients: 546 (returning for ongoing or follow-up support)
These numbers highlight both growth in reach and continuity of care—half of those we served were new to our agency, while the other half represent sustained, long-term relationships.
Gender
52% identify as female
46% identify as male
2% identify as another gender identity or undisclosed
Age
Nearly one in four individuals served this year were children under 12, reflecting the multi-generational reality of our work. The majority (56%) were adults navigating employment, parenting, and recovery, while 6% were older adults—many serving as caregivers or elders seeking stability and healing.
Race / Ethnicity
65% Black or African American
9% White (Non-Latino)
8% Hispanic / Latino
6% American Indian / Alaska Native
5% Multiple Races
2% Other
5% Not Tracked
Special Characteristics
Every person we serve brings their own story, identity, and context. This year, participants self-identified across a wide range of intersectional experiences:
These numbers remind us that safety and healing don’t exist in a vacuum—survivors often navigate overlapping barriers of housing, health, identity, and access.
Victimization and Complexity of Need
Healing at We All Rise rarely begins with a single incident.
Nearly 89% of individuals experienced more than one type of victimization.
On average, each participant reported 6.9 distinct forms of harm across their lifetime.
The most commonly reported victimizations included:
Adult physical assault
Adult sexual assault
Childhood sexual assault
Bullying
Domestic and/or family violence
Fraud or financial crimes
Hate crimes based on identity
Robbery
Stalking and/or harassment
Survivors of homicide victims
Vehicular victimization
Mass violence (domestic or international)
Each layer of harm deepens the complexity of healing and reinforces why culturally grounded, wraparound care is essential.
Accessing Support
Our Community Resource Center remained the heartbeat of We All Rise—serving as a space for immediate support, safety, and community connection.
8,555 total drop-ins throughout the year
Averaging 240 unscheduled visits per week
These visits reflect neighbors showing up when they need it most—no appointment, no prerequisites, just care when it’s needed.
Services Provided Throughout FY 2024–2025
Between October 1, 2024, and September 30, 2025, We All Rise provided a total of 22,848 documented acts of care across all service areas.
Information & Referral Services
37.7% of all participants received information and referral support (4,288 total instances).
Services included providing information about the criminal justice process, explaining victim rights and notifications, and connecting participants to other victim service programs and community supports.
In total, our advocates made 4,132 documented referrals, averaging roughly four community connections per individual served.
Personal Advocacy & Accompaniment Services
99.9% of participants received personal advocacy or accompaniment (13,204 instances).
Supports included:
Victim advocacy and accompaniment to emergency medical care and forensic exams
Law enforcement, immigration, or system navigation support
Individual advocacy with employers, landlords, and creditors
Assistance with child care, transportation, and interpretation services
Nearly every person we serve requires hands-on advocacy and system navigation—underscoring the intensity of barriers our community members face.
Emotional Support & Safety Services
24.8% of participants received emotional or safety-focused services (5,027 instances).
Services included crisis intervention, hotline counseling, on-scene response, therapy, support groups, and emergency financial assistance.
These services provide grounding, connection, and continuity for survivors rebuilding trust and stability.
Criminal & Civil Justice System Assistance
3.8% of participants received justice-related advocacy (329 instances).
Supports included:
Notifications of criminal justice events
Victim impact statement assistance
Help with restitution or restraining orders
Accompaniment to interviews and court proceedings
Legal advocacy and emergency justice-related counsel
These supports bridge survivors’ lived experiences with systems not always built for their protection—helping participants pursue justice and safety with dignity.
What This Data Tells Us
Each number points to the same truth: violence and instability rarely happen in isolation, and neither does healing.
Our work continues to meet the full scope of what survivors experience—providing advocacy, connection, and consistency for those who need it most.
Looking Ahead
As we move into the new fiscal year, We All Rise remains committed to culturally specific, survivor-centered advocacy and building systems that work for everyone.
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