Annual Report Writing
Annual Report Writing
Project details
What we need
- Clear and effective copy for an annual report that illustrates the Organization’s successes and plans for growth (e.g., descriptions of programs, allocation of funds, and recognition of donors and volunteers)
- Blueprint of the structure for the annual report, including optimal content, length, and style
What we have in place
- We currently have an outline, data and last year's annual report, which should make it easy for you to get started. We also have a database, client stories,and supportive team, and the ability to provide any other information you need.
How this will help
This project will save us $9,148 , allowing us to provide legal representation by a trained volunteer attorney to an entire family fleeing violence in their home country seeking asylum or who have experienced violence in the United States.
The success of our organization depends on the community for which we serve stepping forward. Without your help, we cannot continue to showcase our mission of serving immigrants. Your skills will empower us to expand our reach, tell our story and serve more clients.
Project plan
Our mission
Georgia Asylum & Immigration Network (GAIN)'s mission is to to provide free immigration legal services to victims of crime and persecution. Our vision is safety, freedom, and opportunity for all.
What we do
Since its inception in 2005, Georgia Asylum & Immigration Network (GAIN) has served Georgia's vulnerable immigrant community with pro bono legal representation.
GAIN attorneys train and mentor volunteer attorneys, screen cases, and offer technical assistance in immigration matters, while taking on a small percentage of our cases, usually with complex needs, through direct representation. Our impact has grown over time as we expanded the Asylum program's successful model of training and mentoring volunteer attorneys to create the Victims of Violence program for victims of human trafficking, domestic violence, sexual assault, and other crimes.
Since 2005, through direct representation and pro bono referrals, GAIN has helped over 6,600 women, men, and children secure immigration status as a result of a prior victimization or fear of persecution.