Organizations Filed Purposes:
Center for Domestic Peace mobilizes individuals and communities to transform our world so domestic violence no longer exists creating greater safety, justice and equality.
The core services of Center for Domestic Peace include an emergency shelter, 24/7 hotlines, transitional housing, support groups, advocacy, a children and youth initiative, and programs for men and women who have been violent (ManKind and WomanKind). These core services promote the safety and empowerment of domestic violence victims. During FY 18/19, these programs provided services to more than 8,000 contacts as follows: 1. Answered 6,519 hotline calls, providing safety planning, emotional support, referrals, and information.2. Provided emergency shelter for 207 adult victims and 203 children and dependents for a total of 8,932 bednights, along with other supportive services such as food, transportation, clothing, and other basic necessities.3. Provided transitional housing via 21 separate units to 35 adults and 73 children and dependents for a total of 22,200 bednights, together with economic self-sufficiency planning and activities, occupational empowerment, case management, and assistance in securing permanent long-term housing.4. Provided advocacy and assistance within the legal and criminal justice system to 452 individuals through 3,172 sessions.5. Operated Marin Youth Services and Transforming Communities: Marin, which provided: advocacy to 94 youth/young adults; parent/child group therapy to 66 non-abusing parents and 82 children; and leadership engagement activities to 41 youth and young adults as interns/volunteers in shaping services for youth.6. Provided non-residential support groups to 76 participants.7. Educated 110 men through ManKind and 37 women through WomanKind to teach them skills to stop their violent behavior.
Center for Domestic Peace promotes social transformation through technical assistance, education, prevention (including teens and adults), and policy initiatives that build awareness and action toward changing social norms. During FY 18/19, youth leaders addressed changing social norms through a variety of strategies.
Center for Domestic Peace also advances community responsiveness to domestic violence by training and coordinating professionals from various sectors within multiple systems. In FY 18/19, we conducted 72 training events, which reached 2,253 individuals (youth/young adults and their service providers, school administrators and educators, providers in underserved communities, county government personnel, law enforcement, medical and mental health practitioners, C4DP volunteers, and other community members). C4DP also provided outreach and education at 101 separate events that reached a minimum of 18,089 people from throughout the community.
Executives Listed on Filing
Total Salary includes financial earnings, benefits, and all related organization earnings listed on tax filing
Name | Title | Hours Per Week | Total Salary |
Donna M Garske | Executive Director | 40 | $155,733 |
Kathleen I Kain | Deputy Exec. Director | 40 | $134,295 |
Graciela Rodriguez | Director of Emergency Serv | 40 | $109,040 |
Emily Wilson | Director of Finance | 40 | $99,943 |
Carol Miller | Board Member | 1 | $0 |
Laura Collins | Board Member | 1 | $0 |
Aliza Goldberg | Board Member | 1 | $0 |
Donna Motluk | Board Member | 1 | $0 |
Mary Jane Elliott | Board Member | 1 | $0 |
Aida Cecilia Castro Garcia | Board Member | 1 | $0 |
Kim R Tsuchimoto | Board Member | 1 | $0 |
Toni Nies | Treasurer/Secretary | 1 | $0 |
Cynthia Murray | Co-chair | 1 | $0 |
Natasha Singh | Co-chair | 1 | $0 |
Data for this page was sourced from XML published by IRS (
public 990 form dataset) from:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/irs-form-990/202031219349300338_public.xml