New SafeNest facility offers hope, healing for Southern Nevada abuse survivors

LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — SafeNest, a Southern Nevada nonprofit that supports survivors of domestic and sexual violence, has opened a new facility designed to give adults and their children in crisis a safe place to stay after leaving an abuser.

News 3 getting an exclusive first look at the residential campus. The new location, kept confidential for safety reasons, expands on the organization’s emergency shelter by offering what staff call a “trauma triage” center. The short-term facility allows survivors to stay for 72 hours while meeting with a case manager and adjusting to life away from their abuser.

“This is where hope begins,” Anglea Reyes, Chief Program Officer at SafeNest said…

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