Women's Resource Center
Since its inception in 2016, the Love Run 5K has benefitted the Women's Resource Center to End Domestic Violence (WRC). WRC helps survivors of domestic violence with emergency shelter, legal assistance and other ongoing support.
In 2025, WRC acquired the DeKalb Rape Crisis Center (Day League) and now offers services for survivors of sexual assault.
If you need help immediately, please dial 911 or call one of WRC's 24-hour hotline numbers below.
Email: info@wrcdv.org
Domestic Violence Hotline: (404) 688-9436
Sexual Assault Hotline: (404) 377-1428
Community Office: (404) 370-7670
Registered Charity: 58-1698233
DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston and Women's Resource Center Chief Executive Officer Jean Douglas pose for a photo at the finish line of the Love Run 5K on February 28, 2026.
A Note from WRC
A New Name. The Same Promise.
After forty years of serving survivors across the Atlanta area, we are proud to announce that Women’s Resource Center to End Domestic Violence is becoming In Safe Company.
What Our New Name Means
Our new name comes from the heart of what we have always done. When survivors of domestic and sexual violence come to us, what they need most is to feel safe and to know they are not alone.
In — Surrounded. Immersed. Never facing this by yourself.
Safe — The foundation for everything. For rebuilding. For healing. For hope.
Company — Because we are a community. And we bring survivors to the table.
Why We Are Rebranding
Our mission has grown. Last year we expanded through the acquisition of the DeKalb Rape Crisis Center, allowing us to serve survivors of sexual assault in addition to domestic violence.
Today, WRC provides a comprehensive continuum of care, all free of charge:
- 24-hour crisis hotlines
- Safe shelter and permanent housing programs
- Domestic violence outreach services
- Sexual assault services
- Legal advocacy and supervised visitation
- Mental health and wellness services
- Children's programming
- Community education and prevention
We needed a name that could welcome every survivor we serve, regardless of age, gender or background, and one that speaks not to what we stand against, but to what we bring.