Our Work

About THE RRC

Hope. Healing. Recovery.

Our Mission

The mission of the Rape Recovery Center is to support and empower survivors and victims of sexual violence and educate the community about the cause, impact, and prevention of sexual violence.

Our Vision Statement

A community free from sexual violence.

Our Guiding Values

We uphold the highest professional conduct and are accountable to our clients, colleagues, partners, donors, and the greater community.

We recognize the disproportionate impact of sexual violence on marginalized communities and strive to provide services that are responsive to individual identities. This includes, but is not limited to: race, ethnicity, gender identity, language, nationality, immigration status, age, physical and mental ability, sexuality, socioeconomic status, and faith.

We actively work toward centering the voices of marginalized communities through diversity in our staff, board, and volunteers.

We believe in social justice and proactively work to address systemic oppression with the goal of better serving survivors.

We are dedicated to developing community alliances to better serve people affected by sexual violence and work toward its elimination.  

We provide information and education designed to improve the understanding of the causes and prevention of sexual assault.

We work toward the day when sexual violence is part of history, rather than a part of our daily lives.  



Our History

In 1974, founding officers Ronald E. Clark, Sheila P. Kearney, and M. S. Pendleton were committed to change. They recognized the significant needs of the community. Along with a small group of volunteers and community leaders in Salt Lake City, they initiated a local community rape awareness program. Their outreach materials were fully bilingual. Through their dedication to ending sexual violence and supporting survivors, the Salt Lake Rape Crisis Center received its Article of Incorporation on January 10, 1975.

On Feb. 1, 1975 the Center opened. Ron Clark, the minister of the Unitarian Church, and the Church itself loaned the Center money to pay for the phone and keep the Center open until the staff could find funding. Towards the end of that first year, the Rape Center received a grant through Title XX.

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Christine Waters became the first Executive Director, and the Center had the first 24-hour crisis line and mobile response to hospitals in Utah. The center’s first official home was next to now Mary W. Jackson Elementary in the Fairpark community at 776 W. 2nd N.

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In the 1980s, the Rape Crisis Center, the Salt Lake District Attorney’s Office, local police departments, hospitals, and the Utah State Medical Examiner’s Office jointly established a protocol for victims reporting rape and sexual assault. This procedure, called the Code R, was designed to provide immediate service to victims of sexual violence through a standardized rape evidence collection process, medical case, and crisis intervention. This service brought SL Rape Crisis Center staff to hospital emergency rooms and police stations to be with victims in a more official manner. The SL Rape Crisis Center was called out for every Code R.

In the 1990s, under the leadership of Abby Maestas-Trujillo, the Salt Lake Rape Crisis Center was renamed Rape Recovery Center (RRC) to symbolize hope for recovery. In addition, the Rape Recovery Center administered the statewide coalition, CAUSE, at the Center. In 1996 CAUSE became a separate nonprofit entity and was later renamed the Utah Coalition Against Sexual Assault. During this decade, many exciting events occurred, and the center and its staff received national recognition.

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Since becoming the Rape Recovery Center, many structural changes have created greater access to comprehensive recovery for all survivors of sexual trauma. Today, the Rape Recovery Center continues to provide a vital role during the Code R process in Salt Lake County through our Mobile Response Team, assisting nearly 800 survivors annually. The 24-hour crisis line, now administered by UCASA, is a resource to approximately 1,500 callers annually. Our in-office services include personal advocacy, short and long-term counseling, and an array of therapy and support groups, serving over 3,000 clients annually. Our outreach and education programs reach roughly 40,000 community members annually by enriching partnerships and offering primary prevention training.

Our legacy of community care & responsibility

Explore an illustrative history of the Rape Recovery Center, which celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2024.