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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live In-Person Event on 10/23/2026 at 9:00 AM (MDT)
Participants will gain a deeper understanding of how fear and survival instincts show up in a child's behavior, while learning how to respond with patience to build trusting connections through experiential exercises with horses.
This 4-hour workshop builds on participants’ understanding of how trauma impacts brain development, attachment, and behavior. Through experiential exercises with horses, foster and kinship caregivers will gain insight into how fear and survival instincts show up in children’s actions. They’ll practice noticing dysregulation and responding with patience and empathy to build trusting connections; skills they can directly apply at home. The workshop includes a light lunch.
$i++ ?>Lottie Grimes (Moderator)
MA, EDS, LPC
Groundwork Ranch
Lottie’s professional and personal dreams came together in 2010, when she began offering equine-assisted psychotherapy and learning to a wide variety of clients. Her passion for the work has only increased as she’s continually witnessed people make tremendous progress in their confidence, relationship skills, and sense of empowerment after interacting with horses. She brings to her work deep beliefs in every person’s inner wisdom and ability to overcome challenges. Before offering equine-assisted services, Lottie spent years working with abused and neglected children and adolescents in a variety of settings. She received her Masters and Educational Specialist degrees in counseling psychology from James Madison University and is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Certified Clinical Trauma Professional. In addition to her role as executive director of Groundwork Ranch, she operates a private counseling practice where she helps people navigate difficult life transitions and reclaim their personal power. In her free time, Lottie enjoys playing Frisbee golf with her family, gardening, and taking care of her horses.
$i++ ?>Dave Wyner (Moderator)
MA, LPC, NCC
Groundwork Ranch
Dave Wyner, M.A., LPC, NCC received his master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling from Regis University. He’s a National Certified Counselor, a Certified Clinical Trauma Professional, and a Certified Advanced Grief Counseling Specialist. Dave co-facilitates all of Groundwork Ranch’s programs and helps lead program development. In addition to his work at Groundwork Ranch, Dave has a private counseling practice, called A Path Forward Counseling, where he specializes in helping people navigate trauma and grief. He was also the human half of a certified pet therapy team. Until his dog’s retirement in 2019, they visited patients at a local hospital and strolled the concourses of Denver International Airport, helping make travelers, airline personnel, and airport employees smile.
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Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Project 1.27 Referral - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- More Information
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Register
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live In-Person Event on 10/09/2026 at 9:00 AM (MDT)
Equine-assisted activities that provide caregivers tools for staying calm and present when faced with challenging behaviors and emotionally intense situations.
This 4-hour workshop focuses on helping foster and kinship caregivers recognize and manage their own emotional triggers. Using equine-assisted activities, participants will practice tools for staying calm and present when faced with challenging behaviors or emotionally intense situations; skills they can directly apply to caregiving. The workshop includes a light lunch.
$i++ ?>Lottie Grimes (Moderator)
MA, EDS, LPC
Groundwork Ranch
Lottie’s professional and personal dreams came together in 2010, when she began offering equine-assisted psychotherapy and learning to a wide variety of clients. Her passion for the work has only increased as she’s continually witnessed people make tremendous progress in their confidence, relationship skills, and sense of empowerment after interacting with horses. She brings to her work deep beliefs in every person’s inner wisdom and ability to overcome challenges. Before offering equine-assisted services, Lottie spent years working with abused and neglected children and adolescents in a variety of settings. She received her Masters and Educational Specialist degrees in counseling psychology from James Madison University and is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Certified Clinical Trauma Professional. In addition to her role as executive director of Groundwork Ranch, she operates a private counseling practice where she helps people navigate difficult life transitions and reclaim their personal power. In her free time, Lottie enjoys playing Frisbee golf with her family, gardening, and taking care of her horses.
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Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Project 1.27 Referral - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- More Information
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Register
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live In-Person Event on 09/11/2026 at 9:00 AM (MDT)
Equine-assisted activities that provide caregivers tools for staying calm and present when faced with challenging behaviors and emotionally intense situations.
This 4-hour workshop focuses on helping foster and kinship caregivers recognize and manage their own emotional triggers. Using equine-assisted activities, participants will practice tools for staying calm and present when faced with challenging behaviors or emotionally intense situations; skills they can directly apply to caregiving. The workshop includes a light lunch.
$i++ ?>Lottie Grimes (Moderator)
MA, EDS, LPC
Groundwork Ranch
Lottie’s professional and personal dreams came together in 2010, when she began offering equine-assisted psychotherapy and learning to a wide variety of clients. Her passion for the work has only increased as she’s continually witnessed people make tremendous progress in their confidence, relationship skills, and sense of empowerment after interacting with horses. She brings to her work deep beliefs in every person’s inner wisdom and ability to overcome challenges. Before offering equine-assisted services, Lottie spent years working with abused and neglected children and adolescents in a variety of settings. She received her Masters and Educational Specialist degrees in counseling psychology from James Madison University and is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Certified Clinical Trauma Professional. In addition to her role as executive director of Groundwork Ranch, she operates a private counseling practice where she helps people navigate difficult life transitions and reclaim their personal power. In her free time, Lottie enjoys playing Frisbee golf with her family, gardening, and taking care of her horses.
$i++ ?>Dave Wyner
MA, LPC, NCC
Groundwork Ranch
Dave Wyner, M.A., LPC, NCC received his master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling from Regis University. He’s a National Certified Counselor, a Certified Clinical Trauma Professional, and a Certified Advanced Grief Counseling Specialist. Dave co-facilitates all of Groundwork Ranch’s programs and helps lead program development. In addition to his work at Groundwork Ranch, Dave has a private counseling practice, called A Path Forward Counseling, where he specializes in helping people navigate trauma and grief. He was also the human half of a certified pet therapy team. Until his dog’s retirement in 2019, they visited patients at a local hospital and strolled the concourses of Denver International Airport, helping make travelers, airline personnel, and airport employees smile.
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Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Project 1.27 Referral - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- More Information
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Register
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live In-Person Event on 08/21/2026 at 9:00 AM (MDT)
Participants will gain a deeper understanding of how fear and survival instincts show up in a child's behavior, while learning how to respond with patience to build trusting connections through experiential exercises with horses.
This 4-hour workshop builds on participants’ understanding of how trauma impacts brain development, attachment, and behavior. Through experiential exercises with horses, foster and kinship caregivers will gain insight into how fear and survival instincts show up in children’s actions. They’ll practice noticing dysregulation and responding with patience and empathy to build trusting connections; skills they can directly apply at home. The workshop includes a light lunch.
$i++ ?>Lottie Grimes (Moderator)
MA, EDS, LPC
Groundwork Ranch
Lottie’s professional and personal dreams came together in 2010, when she began offering equine-assisted psychotherapy and learning to a wide variety of clients. Her passion for the work has only increased as she’s continually witnessed people make tremendous progress in their confidence, relationship skills, and sense of empowerment after interacting with horses. She brings to her work deep beliefs in every person’s inner wisdom and ability to overcome challenges. Before offering equine-assisted services, Lottie spent years working with abused and neglected children and adolescents in a variety of settings. She received her Masters and Educational Specialist degrees in counseling psychology from James Madison University and is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Certified Clinical Trauma Professional. In addition to her role as executive director of Groundwork Ranch, she operates a private counseling practice where she helps people navigate difficult life transitions and reclaim their personal power. In her free time, Lottie enjoys playing Frisbee golf with her family, gardening, and taking care of her horses.
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Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Project 1.27 Referral - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- More Information
-
Register
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live In-Person Event on 07/24/2026 at 9:00 AM (MDT)
Equine-assisted activities that provide caregivers tools for staying calm and present when faced with challenging behaviors and emotionally intense situations.
This 4-hour workshop focuses on helping foster and kinship caregivers recognize and manage their own emotional triggers. Using equine-assisted activities, participants will practice tools for staying calm and present when faced with challenging behaviors or emotionally intense situations; skills they can directly apply to caregiving. The workshop includes a light lunch.
$i++ ?>Lottie Grimes (Moderator)
MA, EDS, LPC
Groundwork Ranch
Lottie’s professional and personal dreams came together in 2010, when she began offering equine-assisted psychotherapy and learning to a wide variety of clients. Her passion for the work has only increased as she’s continually witnessed people make tremendous progress in their confidence, relationship skills, and sense of empowerment after interacting with horses. She brings to her work deep beliefs in every person’s inner wisdom and ability to overcome challenges. Before offering equine-assisted services, Lottie spent years working with abused and neglected children and adolescents in a variety of settings. She received her Masters and Educational Specialist degrees in counseling psychology from James Madison University and is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Certified Clinical Trauma Professional. In addition to her role as executive director of Groundwork Ranch, she operates a private counseling practice where she helps people navigate difficult life transitions and reclaim their personal power. In her free time, Lottie enjoys playing Frisbee golf with her family, gardening, and taking care of her horses.
$i++ ?>Dave Wyner (Moderator)
MA, LPC, NCC
Groundwork Ranch
Dave Wyner, M.A., LPC, NCC received his master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling from Regis University. He’s a National Certified Counselor, a Certified Clinical Trauma Professional, and a Certified Advanced Grief Counseling Specialist. Dave co-facilitates all of Groundwork Ranch’s programs and helps lead program development. In addition to his work at Groundwork Ranch, Dave has a private counseling practice, called A Path Forward Counseling, where he specializes in helping people navigate trauma and grief. He was also the human half of a certified pet therapy team. Until his dog’s retirement in 2019, they visited patients at a local hospital and strolled the concourses of Denver International Airport, helping make travelers, airline personnel, and airport employees smile.
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Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Project 1.27 Referral - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- More Information
-
Register
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live In-Person Event on 05/15/2026 at 9:00 AM (MDT)
Participants will gain a deeper understanding of how fear and survival instincts show up in a child's behavior, while learning how to respond with patience to build trusting connections through experiential exercises with horses.
This 4-hour workshop builds on participants’ understanding of how trauma impacts brain development, attachment, and behavior. Through experiential exercises with horses, foster and kinship caregivers will gain insight into how fear and survival instincts show up in children’s actions. They’ll practice noticing dysregulation and responding with patience and empathy to build trusting connections; skills they can directly apply at home. The workshop includes a light lunch.
-
Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Project 1.27 Referral - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- More Information
-
Register
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live In-Person Event on 05/15/2026 at 9:00 AM (MDT)
Equine-assisted activities that provide caregivers tools for staying calm and present when faced with challenging behaviors and emotionally intense situations.
This 4-hour workshop focuses on helping foster and kinship caregivers recognize and manage their own emotional triggers. Using equine-assisted activities, participants will practice tools for staying calm and present when faced with challenging behaviors or emotionally intense situations; skills they can directly apply to caregiving. The workshop includes a light lunch.
$i++ ?>Lottie Grimes (Moderator)
MA, EDS, LPC
Groundwork Ranch
Lottie’s professional and personal dreams came together in 2010, when she began offering equine-assisted psychotherapy and learning to a wide variety of clients. Her passion for the work has only increased as she’s continually witnessed people make tremendous progress in their confidence, relationship skills, and sense of empowerment after interacting with horses. She brings to her work deep beliefs in every person’s inner wisdom and ability to overcome challenges. Before offering equine-assisted services, Lottie spent years working with abused and neglected children and adolescents in a variety of settings. She received her Masters and Educational Specialist degrees in counseling psychology from James Madison University and is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Certified Clinical Trauma Professional. In addition to her role as executive director of Groundwork Ranch, she operates a private counseling practice where she helps people navigate difficult life transitions and reclaim their personal power. In her free time, Lottie enjoys playing Frisbee golf with her family, gardening, and taking care of her horses.
$i++ ?>Dave Wyner (Moderator)
MA, LPC, NCC
Groundwork Ranch
Dave Wyner, M.A., LPC, NCC received his master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling from Regis University. He’s a National Certified Counselor, a Certified Clinical Trauma Professional, and a Certified Advanced Grief Counseling Specialist. Dave co-facilitates all of Groundwork Ranch’s programs and helps lead program development. In addition to his work at Groundwork Ranch, Dave has a private counseling practice, called A Path Forward Counseling, where he specializes in helping people navigate trauma and grief. He was also the human half of a certified pet therapy team. Until his dog’s retirement in 2019, they visited patients at a local hospital and strolled the concourses of Denver International Airport, helping make travelers, airline personnel, and airport employees smile.
-
Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Project 1.27 Referral - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- More Information
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Register
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 04/25/2026 at 9:30 AM (MDT)
Hard conversations are part of every family’s journey—especially when multiple people are supporting the same child. Whether you’re a foster parent, kinship caregiver, or biological parent, communication can quickly become overwhelming when stress, trauma, and different perspectives are involved. This training offers practical, trauma-informed tools to help you navigate those moments with more confidence and less conflict. You’ll learn how to understand what’s underneath behaviors and reactions, communicate in ways that reduce defensiveness, and move conversations toward repair instead of escalation. We’ll share simple frameworks and real-life scripts you can use with children, co-parents, and professionals—so you’re not left guessing what to say when it matters most. Designed for families navigating foster, kinship, or reunification, this session supports stronger relationships and greater stability for the children you care about.
Let’s be honest—some of the hardest moments in this journey come down to conversations that don’t go the way we hoped.
Whether it’s with a child, a biological parent, a caseworker, or even someone on your own support team, it can feel overwhelming to know what to say—or how to say it.
This session will give you practical, trauma-informed tools to:
- Navigate conflict without escalating it
- Communicate in ways that reduce defensiveness
- Understand what’s underneath behaviors and reactions
- Repair relationships when things don’t go as planned
You’ll walk away with simple frameworks and real-life scripts you can actually use—right when it matters most.
This training is for anyone supporting the same child from different roles and wanting to do that with less conflict and more connection.
$i++ ?>Jennifer Dexter
Dexter Mediation
Jennifer is an accomplished mediator with 20 years experience. After graduating from Law School, Jennifer began her mediation career mediating workplace conflict, negotiating contracts, family conflicts, and other community disputes. Over the years, Jennifer began to concentrate on the family dynamic and the inherent conflict therein.
In her capacity as a certified mediator, Jennifer utilizes restorative mediation (restorative justice and mediation) to address conflict in an innovative way. Her approach is a specialized avenue to conflict resolution that integrates therapeutic principles and restorative principals into the mediation process. Unlike traditional mediation, which might focus solely on negotiating practical settlements, Jennifer guides people to delve deeper. It acknowledges and addresses the underlying emotional dynamics, communication patterns, past hurts, and individual needs that often fuel and sustain conflict.
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Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Project 1.27 Referral - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Foster Parent (New Mexico) - Free!
- New Mexico Misc. - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Foster Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- Speaker - Free!
- Teacher - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- Former FP/Adoptive Parent/Not currently fostering - Free!
- County/CPA Worker - Free!
- CASA - Free!
- More Information
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 04/11/2026 at 9:30 AM (MDT)
At just a young age, Liz did something most adults struggle to do — she reported her own abuse to protect her siblings. In this powerful one-hour session, Liz shares what it means to survive foster care, fight for your siblings, and grow up carrying the weight of your own rescue. This is not a training about policy. It’s a story about courage, sibling separation, identity, and reunion — told by someone who lived it.
What happens when a child becomes the one who calls for help?
As a young girl living in an abusive home, Liz made a decision that would change the trajectory of her life — and her siblings’ lives. She reported the abuse herself, stepping into a role no child should have to carry: advocate.
In this powerful and deeply personal session, Elizabeth Sutherland — author of No Ordinary Liz and contributor to Growing Up in the Care of Strangers — shares her lived experience of entering foster care, navigating sibling separation, and holding onto hope for reunification.
Liz’s story brings forward the emotional realities children often carry inside the child welfare system:
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The burden of self-reporting
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The fear and loyalty are intertwined in sibling relationships
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The confusion of identity when placements change
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The quiet determination to protect the people you love
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The lasting impact of separation — and the complexity of reunion
This session will create space to reflect on:
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How sibling separation shapes attachment and belonging
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What child-led advocacy reveals about safety and trust
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The invisible emotional labor children carry
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How caregivers can create stability, dignity, and healing
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What children in care wish adults understood
Through storytelling, reflection, and discussion, Liz invites caregivers to see foster care not through policy or paperwork, but through the lived perspective of a child who survived it.
You will leave with a deeper understanding of how your presence, your words, and your decisions can influence a child’s sense of safety and identity for years to come.
$i++ ?>Elizabeth Sutherland
No Ordinary Liz
A passionate advocate for children and increasing awareness about the foster care system, Liz is the author of The Extraordinary Story of No Ordinary Liz—her latest children’s book—as well as No Ordinary Liz (now in its second printing) and Growing Up in The Care of Strangers, which together tell her remarkable journey as a foster child. A passionate advocate for children and raising awareness about the foster care system, she has been a frequent motivational speaker for various organizations and has shared her story on numerous podcasts, radio shows, and TV programs. She actively volunteers within her community and serves on the board of Fostering Success. In her free time, Liz enjoys spontaneous road trips to new and adventurous destinations, blogging, meeting new people, exploring the open water, and embracing all that life has to offer.
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Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- Foster Parent (New Mexico) - Free!
- New Mexico Misc. - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Foster Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- Speaker - Free!
- Teacher - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- Former FP/Adoptive Parent/Not currently fostering - Free!
- County/CPA Worker - Free!
- CASA - Free!
- More Information
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 09/17/2025
All about caregiver intervention in Colorado child welfare.
The class will cover all things intervention in Colorado child welfare.
Intervention means that an “outsider” becomes a party to the case and “are afforded the same degree of participation as all other parties.” A.M. v. A.C., 296 P. 3d 1026, 1033 (Colo. 2013).
In other words, once a foster parent, kin provider, and/or relative is granted intervenor status, they may advocate for what they believe is in the child’s best interest through filing motions and fully participating in hearings by calling witnesses, making argument, and questioning other parties’ witnesses.
Hours earned: 1.0
$i++ ?>Timothy Eirich (Moderator)
Attorney
Grob & Eirich, LLC
Timothy J. Eirich is an honors graduate of the Loyola University of Chicago School of Law. At Loyola, Tim was as a Philip H. Corboy Fellow (member of the National Trial Team), a Curt N. Rodin Fellow in advocacy, and a Civitas Childlaw Fellow. Tim was also an associate editor for the Children's Legal Rights Journal. Tim received his undergraduate degree from Santa Clara University where he majored in English and was a captain of the NCAA Division 1 Crew Team. Tim focuses his practice on adoption, child welfare, and guardianship cases. Tim represents prospective adoptive parents, foster parents, relatives, birth parents, and juveniles charged with delinquent acts. Tim is an experienced litigator who has tried over twenty-five jury trials, litigated dozens of contested hearings, and has argued in the front of both the Colorado Supreme Court and Court of Appeals. Tim litigated the ground-breaking case, both at the trial level and before the Colorado Supreme Court, that addressed the rights of foster parents and other caregivers in dependency and neglect cases. Tim has also received a number of awards recognizing his work. In 2012, Tim received the Excellence in Practice Award for a Juvenile Law Attorney at the Colorado Summit for Childen Youth and Families. In 2014, the Colorado State Foster Parent Association honored Tim with the Champion Award for work and efforts on behalf of Colorado’s foster parents. Also, in 2014, the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute awarded Tim the prestigious Angels in Adoption Award for his work in adoption and positive child welfare practices. Tim has handled dozens of private, public, and contested adoptions and has been recognized as a Fellow with the American Academy of Adoption Attorneys. Tim has lectured frequently on the rights of foster parents and the child welfare system and is a regular presenter for the Colorado State Foster Parent Association. In addition to training foster parents and relative caregivers, Tim teaches trial skills to fellow attorneys as an instructor for the National Institute of Trial Advocacy (NITA). Prior to joining the Grob & Eirich, LLC, Tim was the Deputy Director of the Rocky Mountain Children's Law Center where he litigated some of the center's highest profile cases; represented foster parents, prospective adoptive parents, relative caregivers and juveniles; and supervised a multi-disciplinary staff of attorneys and social workers who served as guardians ad litem for abused and neglected children in Denver Juvenile Court. Prior to his time with the Children's Law Center, Tim was a trial attorney with the Office of the Colorado Public Defender where he represented adults and juveniles charged with felony offenses.
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Register
- Foster Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- CASA - Free!
- County/CPA Worker - Free!
- Former FP/Adoptive Parent/Not currently fostering - Free!
- Foster Source Staff - Free!
- Teacher - Free!
- Speaker - Free!
- Foster Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Certified Kin Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Colorado) - Free!
- Non-certified Kin Parent (Outside Colorado) - Free!
- New Mexico Misc. - Free!
- Foster Parent (New Mexico) - Free!
- Guest - Equine Program - Free!
- More Information
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Register