Human Trafficking Resource Directory
Our resource directory lists support services for survivors of exploitation across Colorado. To learn about additional resources not listed here, contact our Hotline by calling 866-455-5075 or texting 720-999-9724.
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We are an anti-trafficking organization serving survivors of sexual abuse and exploitation. We offer counseling services and emergency response case management for survivors, and more.
The Delores Project offers 24/7, extended stay shelter to women and transgender invididuals experiencing homelessness. All guests have access to trauma informed supportive servies, housing focused case management, and behavioral health care.
The Don’t Look Back Center (DLBC) was founded in 2018 as a center to keep women and transwomen with substance use disorders, Trauma, and PTSD out of the criminal justice system. DLBC provides substance use disorder treatment and prevention services and trauma services including: a relapse prevention group, DUI/DWAI Classes, competency restoration education, transitional sober living home, and H.E.R. culturally competent group counseling. They also provide care management and supportive housing to adult females and transwomen.
Trauma-Informed, Gender-Responsive, and Holistic Behavioral Health Treatment and Services. Services provided include support groups (trauma, empowerment, addiction recovery, and men’s trauma recovery), behavioral health, HIV prevention and care, criminal justice (programs for incarcerated or formerly incarcerated individuals to help get back on track), housing (direct referrals from Parole and City of Denver), and acudetox/acupuncture.
Family Tree is a non-profit human services agency providing innovative, life-changing services designed to end child abuse, domestic violence and homelessness. They are able to provide legal and basic needs services to human trafficking survivors through their Legal Advocacy Program (i.g., protection orders, divorce and custody) and Domestic Violence Outreach Program (i.g., advocacy, support groups, basic needs).
Women, transgender individuals, and their children who seek assistance from The Gathering Place have access to a wide range of programs and services. These include: Day shelter services that meet basic needs, connect clients to resources, crisis and wellness services, and provide peer to peer engagement. Additional services include: showers, laundry, nap rooms, meals, food/clothing bank, harm reduction (Narcan + training & test strips), Art studio, peer specialist, mental health services, and housing case management.
The Direct Services program provides victim advocacy grounded in the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Victim Rights Act. Advocates at The Initiative respect each client’s right to self-determination and provide appropriate and necessary services in order to best meet each unique individual’s safety needs. The Initiative provides comprehensive, creative, and collaborative services in order to address clients’ complex goals and objectives. These services primarily fall within 4 categories: safety, self-sufficiency, criminal justice support, and recovery and healing. Further, these services are rooted in accessible, culturally-responsive, and trauma-informed (ACRTI) approaches to advocacy.
All services are mobile and dynamic, and all services are available to monolingual Spanish speakers and victims in rural areas. Additionally, office culture, language usage, and core values and beliefs at The Initiative are LGBTQ+ inclusive. We Serve Serves survivors – DV/IPV, SA, HT, Stalking, Caregiver/Elder Abuse – with a physical, cognitive, sensory, health-related, emotional, or developmental disability. No documentation/official diagnosis needed.
Ability to provide on-call, on-site advocacy in rural communities.
Financial Assistance may be available.
The Phoenix Center at Auraria (PCA) serves students, staff, and faculty associated with University of Colorado Denver, Community College of Denver, and Metropolitan State University Denver. The PCA provides free and confidential resources and assistance to survivors of interpersonal violence (relationship violence, sexual violence, and stalking), as well as their friends, families, and concerned others. The PCA support services include academic advocacy, assistance reporting to the school and/or law enforcement at the survivor’s request, safety planning, court accompaniment, emotional support, and more. The PCA also provides campus education and training, awareness raising events, and campus policy guidance.
The Place offers three vital programs that support young people on their journey including outreach, shelter and housing. At The PLACE, youth find skills, support and insight that allow them to step off the streets and step toward a brighter future. The Place helps youth through a variety of programs including family & life skills, health & medical care, employment, case management, and education.
We’re actively removing barriers to care — from long wait times to costly out-of-pocket fees and burnt-out providers — and, in turn, expanding access to high-quality therapy and psychiatry.
Core program (Motherwise) includes 6 weeks of workshops plus one-on-one coaching for mothers on knowing themselves, what healthy relationships are to them, communication and relationship skills for all kinds of relationships, and connecting with a newborn baby. After core programming has been delivered, additional opportunities for wrap around services are provided. Must be pregnant or parenting to receive services.
We support workers who have faced injustices in the workplace. We either take on cases directly or support workers in finding the next best steps for their potential case.
We offer a four step relocation program to help individuals, decide, move, get settled and get community support in Colorado
Since 1979, Tu Casa has provided free, confidential, bilingual advocacy, counseling, and outreach services to child and adult victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, elder abuse, and hate crimes throughout the 6 rural counties of the San Luis Valley in Colorado. We empower survivors to live healthy, violence-free lives by providing 24/7 crisis services, safe shelter, emergency financial assistance, therapy, legal support, and community referrals. After receiving our services, 96% of clients reported feeling safer and less alone in their experience, more confident that they would achieve their goals, and more hopeful about their future.
Denver’s only licensed shelter for youth ages 15 through 20 who are experiencing homelessness. They also provide a drop-in center, basic needs access (lockers, showers, food). All clients have access to case management and support services for academics and employment.
We provide intensive case management and mental health services in a “one-stop shop” environment in a confidential location that is safe, quiet and trauma informed. As part of our services we maintain a small resource bank and offer survivor support and mental health groups, as well as some on-site employment opportunities. We work closely with other trusted service providers in order to achieve a wrap around services option for those who desire such services. We have received multi-year funding to develop a peer support program. We believe in voluntad: the human ability and right to choose with freedom and dignity. We believe that while we can share resources and information, each survivor is the expert of their own life and deserves the chance to exercise and develop agency, self determination and a vision for the future. We seek to empower this in every survivor.
The Volunteers of America Southwest Safehouse serves adult and children survivors of domestic violence or other violence crimes of any gender. The Southwest Safehouse provides a safe refuge for those who have no safe home, and provides the tools and support needed to recover from trauma and start a new life.
SERVICES PROVIDED: 24-hour telephone crisis intervention, 24/7/365 residential domestic violence shelter services with 24-hour intake, Provision of all basic needs: nutritious meals, shower and laundry facilities, clothing closet and personal hygiene supplies, Extensive resource referral and task-oriented counseling, Specialized children’s services, Life skills training, Employment services and Educational modules on parenting.
Rapid rehousing, emergency shelter and transitional housing services for veterans who are experiencing homelessness or at risk of homelessness. Wrap around services (also available to non-shelter guests) include: Day Shelter, Financial Assistance, Basic Needs, Rapid Rehousing, Case Management, Emergency Shelter (female seniors only)
WellPower provides community behavioral health care. Through multiple community sites, mental health providers in several Denver public schools, collaborations with community partnerships and home-based outreach, Wellpower provides treatment, prevention, outreach and crisis services to children, families and adults.