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Competitor Summary. See how Child Advocates compares to its main competitors:

  • Project HOPE has the most employees (750).
  • The oldest company is The Center for Women and Families, founded in 1912.
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Child Advocates vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1984
3.5
Houston, TX2$4.9M50
1977
3.3
Beaverton, OR1$1.5M46
2013
3.5
Austin, TX1$8.5M270
Texas CASA
1989
3.3
Austin, TX1$17.5M20
1984
3.6
San Antonio, TX1$4.6M525
1967
4.0
Albany, NY1$5.9M50
1979
3.7
Dallas, TX1$50.0M130
1976
3.8
Jacksonville, FL1$7.2M65
Voices for Children
1980
3.9
San Diego, CA2$6.0M20
1912
3.1
Louisville, KY1$4.9M85
1976
3.4
Covington, KY2$1.8M35
1986
2.9
Hickory, NC1$450,00030
1923
4.2
Salt Lake City, UT1-300
1958
4.8
Boyce, VA2$89.3M750
1979
3.8
Escondido, CA1$19.7M240
1969
3.1
San Diego, CA1$5.0M86
1988
3.5
Tulsa, OK1$1.3M30
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL KS
1980
3.6
Salina, KS1$999,99913
1982
3.9
Detroit, MI1$11.8M100
1969
4.2
Los Angeles, CA1$57.4M750
1970
3.8
Minneapolis, MN1$3.5M58

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Child Advocates salaries vs competitors

Compare Child Advocates salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
Child Advocates
$37,231$17.90-

Compare Child Advocates job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
Child Advocates
$38,673$18.59
The Center for Women and Families
$43,841$21.08
Domestic Violence Resource Center
$43,727$21.02
Hubbard House
$43,662$20.99
Women's Resource Center
$42,247$20.31
Safeplace
$42,145$20.26
Women's Crisis Center
$41,446$19.93
The Road Home
$41,440$19.92
The Bridge for Youth
$40,981$19.70
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL KS
$40,839$19.63
Child Advocates San Antonio
$40,513$19.48
Voices for Children
$40,445$19.44
Center for Community Solutions
$40,222$19.34
COTS
$40,210$19.33
Child Abuse Network
$39,876$19.17
Dallas CASA
$39,868$19.17
Los Angeles LGBT Center
$39,622$19.05
Project HOPE
$39,327$18.91
Texas CASA
$37,084$17.83
Interfaith Community Services
$35,219$16.93

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Child Advocates demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at Child Advocates vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
Child Advocates20%80%
Voices for Children23%77%
Hope House28%72%
Project HOPE29%71%
Child Abuse Network29%71%
Los Angeles LGBT Center57%43%
Male
Female

Compare race at Child Advocates vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
65%15%11%6%3%
6.6
62%17%12%6%3%
8.5
62%16%12%6%4%
7.4
Voices for Children
55%21%11%8%5%
8.5
62%16%12%7%4%
9.8
45%33%7%9%5%
8.9

Child Advocates and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio

Verna Griffin-Tabor is a Chief Executive Officer at Center For Community Solutions.

Charlyn Hasson Brown
Child Advocates San Antonio

Charlyn Hasson Brown is a Former CEO at CASA, Children's Intervention Services at Retired and Charting a New Course and Chief Executive Officer at Child Advocates San Antonio (CASA) and is based in Prince William Fauquier. She studied at OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY.

Michelle Flynn
The Road Home

Thomas Kenyon
Project HOPE

A recognized global health leader, Dr. Tom Kenyon has long been at the forefront of responding to some of the world’s deadliest epidemics and long-term health challenges. Before returning to Project HOPE in 2015 as the CEO, Dr. Kenyon held numerous senior global health leadership positions over a 21 year career with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In order to be full time with programs, Dr. Kenyon became Chief Health Officer at Project HOPE in July, 2019. Dr. Kenyon worked for 22 years on the front lines at the country level, including Grenada, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Ethiopia, as a pediatrician, researcher, epidemiologist, and team leader. He was a key player in CDC's mobilization against the Ebola epidemic in West Africa in 2014, and has spent most of his career engaged with countries in the worldwide fight against HIV/AIDS, TB, and child mortality. He also held two senior executive level global health positions in the U.S. government, including Principal Deputy Global AIDS Coordinator and Chief Medical Officer for the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) from 2006-2008, and as the Director of the CDC Center for Global Health from 2013-2015, where he oversaw CDC’s global health work in 65 countries. Earlier in his career, Dr. Kenyon served as Regional Director for Africa at Project HOPE, as Director of Communicable Diseases for the Chicago Department of Health, and as a practicing pediatrician in Tucson, Arizona.

Lorri L. Jean is nationally recognized as one of the most seasoned and effective leaders in the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) civil rights movement. OUT magazine has twice listed her as one of the 50 most powerful gay and lesbian people in the nation. In 2006, Los Angeles Magazine named her as one of the 100 most influential people in Los Angeles, and in 2014 it named her one of the ten most inspiring women in Los Angeles. Jean currently serves as CEO of the Los Angeles LGBT Center, the world's largest provider of programs and services for LGBT people. Jean has been an activist on LGBT issues since 1979. She served as the lead plaintiff in the successful landmark lawsuit against Georgetown University to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. She also was the first openly gay or lesbian person in history to receive a top secret security clearance from the Central Intelligence Agency. In 1989, with her appointment as Deputy Regional Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), she became the highest-ranking openly gay or lesbian person in the Federal government (a distinction she held until 1993 when President Clinton appointed Roberta Achtenberg). In 1993, Jean began her first six-year tenure at the helm of the Center (to which she returned in June 2003). She led the Center through a period of unprecedented expansion, dramatically increasing the number of clients and volunteers, the diversity and volume of services, the number of staff, and the size of the budget. She also oversaw the purchase and renovation of a $7 million facility and built the nation's first $10 million dollar LGBT organization endowment fund. During her second tenure, Jean has returned the Center to financial stability, dramatically expanded programming to 10 locations across Los Angeles while more than quadrupling the revenue budget to $141 million. She also led the Center's historic capital campaign for the $142 million Anita May Rosenstein Campus, which opened in April 2019. From 2001 to 2003, Jean served as executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, leading an organizational turnaround that brought the Task Force to financial solvency and increased the annual revenues to what was then an all-time high. Among other program accomplishments, she focused the organization's political efforts at the state and local level by building a field organizing department which orchestrated the defeat of nearly all anti-LGBT ballot measures in the 2001 and 2002 election cycles. Prior to 1993, Jean spent 10 years as an attorney with FEMA, including three years overseeing the disaster response and recovery operations of its largest region, where she was responsible for the management of a staff of 1,000 and a budget of more than $1 billion. Jean holds a Juris Doctorate degree from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., and a Bachelor of Science degree in communication from Arizona State University, and is a member of the bar in California and Washington, D.C. She and her wife, attorney Gina M. Calvelli, live in Hollywood and were legally married in September 2008.

Julia Spann
Safeplace

Cheryl P. Johnson
COTS

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