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Building support and empathy in the workplace? Find out how on Wednesday's CTIPP CAN Call

 

Want to build and support empathy in the workplace to help prevent and mitigate trauma on the job?

Please join CTIPP’s next Community Action Network (CAN) call (free!) on Wednesday, July 20, 2022, from 2:00 - 3:30 p.m. ET / 11:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. PT:

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The call will feature Katherine Manning, author of The Empathetic Workplace: Five Steps to a Compassionate, Calm, and Confident Response to Trauma on the Job and the President of Blackbird DC.

Trauma-informed leadership is the key to building productive, resilient, and cohesive organizations. However, balancing the needs of employees, clients, and the organization with compassion and skill is not always easy. We will discuss the importance of trauma-informed leadership and cover the practical steps to build a trauma-informed culture through shifts in how we lead our organizations and ourselves. Through commitment and dedication, we can build a trauma-informed culture for a stronger organization, more productive teams, and a healthier workforce.

CTIPP will also provide an update on trauma funding in the gun safety legislation (Bipartisan Safer Communities Act) that was just signed into law by President Biden and the latest on U.S. Senate appropriations, as well as trauma-informed policy updates with Capitol Hill staff.

Screen Shot 2022-07-19 at 8.24.33 PMAbout Katherine Manning

Katherine Manning is the President of Blackbird DC, which provides training on empathy at work, particularly in challenging times when it matters most. She is the author of The Empathetic Workplace: Five Steps to a Compassionate, Calm, and Confident Response to Trauma on the Job (HarperCollins Leadership 2021). Katherine has advised organizations on working with those in trauma for more than twenty-five years, including fifteen years as a Senior Attorney Advisor at the Justice Department. She worked on cases like Bernie Madoff, the Boston Marathon bombing, and the South Carolina AME Church shooting.

Before her government service, Katherine was an attorney in private practice representing Fortune 500 companies in class actions, insurance, and media cases. She teaches at American University and in the Masters in Trauma-Informed Leadership Program at Dominican University. She graduated from Smith College and the University of Virginia School of Law.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: Watch our June 2022 CTIPP CAN Call, which explored the integrated science of Positive and Adverse Childhood Experiences (PACEs) with Craig McEwen, a former Bowdoin College professor, and Dennis Haffron, an adjunct professor at Morton College.

View this announcement in your web browser to access previous CTIPP CAN calls, join CTIPP, or make a donation!

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