To date we’ve served over 1,700 survivors of trafficking, engaged with more than 15,000 men attempting to purchase sex, and provided dignified employment to 21 survivors. All of these programs exist because if proximity has taught us anything, it’s that everyone is worthy of the chance to rebuild their lives.
Carrah Bay
Worthy Co. Operations Manager
Carrah is a Fort Worth native and is the youngest of three sisters. After receiving her undergrad at The University of Oklahoma, Carrah interned for The Worthy Co. in the Fall of 2020! After falling in love with Worthy Co. and supporting survivors rebuilding their lives, she joined our team full-time as the Operations Manager in 2022.
When she’s not running production and supporting our survivor employees, you can find her playing with her super energetic border collie, Lucy Mae, or visiting Sunset Cliffs in San Diego, CA - her favorite place in the world!
Board of Directors
Chris Mellina | Chair
Director of Operations, Avocet Ventures LP
Drew Neill | Chair-Elect
Partner, Kelly Hart & Hallman, LLP
Megan Cano Dobbertien | Past Chair
Senior Director of Marketing, Radical
Alexi Alvis
National Manager of Field Sales Training, BillionToOne, Inc.
Ciara Bertolino
Director of Strategic Partnerships, IJM
Katey Hellman
Founder + Blogger, Chronicles of Frivolity
Tyler Kelly | Treasurer
Owner/VP of Operations, Visiting Angels
Jordan Molberg Owner, Molberg Plumbing LLC
Keeton Monahan Partner, Turner-Monahan, PLLC
Karen Smith
HR Director, Cantey Hanger, LLP
Chris Taylor | Member Emeritus
Director, RAM Interests
Julie Wilks Vice President, LanCarte Commercial Real Estate
Advisory Board Members:
Dr. Vanessa Bouché, Lance Cashion, Heather Essian, Kelly Lancarte, Belinda Marshall, Jay & Toni Meadows, Emily Radler, Jackie & Jim Snyder, Becca Stupfel, Karen Wiseman
MASE Board Members:
Crockett Jurrius, Chris Mellina, Jordan Molberg
Power of Relationships
In 2010, our founder and a handful of passionate college students started building relationships with people experiencing homelessness. They quickly learned that because poverty is rooted in broken relationships, the people they were meeting needed friendship and a network of support more than they needed material handouts.
Through several years of mentoring refugee youth and sharing meals and building relationships with folks experiencing homelessness, they regularly met and formed friendships with vulnerable women and girls in Fort Worth.
While spending time with them, they repeatedly saw the ways that violence, trauma, and poverty lead to situations of sexual exploitation and trafficking. By walking alongside these women, building friendships, and hearing their stories, they began to learn how complicated the issue of sex trafficking is.
In order to “get out of the sex industry,” they needed more than just rehab and probation. More than anything, they needed a supportive community who would commit to coming alongside them, despite the trauma and hardships of their pasts, as they rebuilt their lives and walked forward in freedom.
Proximity Breeds Compassion
In 2012
The Net was invited to join the treatment team of a specialty court called RISE under Judge Brent Carr’s leadership. As a partner organization to RISE, we began providing one-on-one advocacy and social support to the 40+ women survivors of trafficking and sexual exploitation in the program.
As we walked alongside these survivors, we heard countless stories of the abuse and trauma they endured not only at the hands of their traffickers but also from the buyers who purchased them. After 2 years of hearing these stories, we decided we wanted to reach the men who were causing so much harm to these strong and resilient survivors.
In 2014
We joined Demand Abolition’s CEASE Network (Cities Empowered Against Sexual Exploitation) North Texas core team along with several other DFW stakeholders. This was the beginning of our MASE initiative (Men Against Sexual Exploitation), which led to a formal training and partnership with The EPIK Project to conduct online cyber patrols in 2015.
Through these partnerships and the relationships we had formed, we learned that we can simultaneously combat the injustice of sex trafficking as well as the shame it causes both for the men and women involved.
After 6 years
of watching survivor graduates of the RISE program struggle to gain employment, we decided to create a solution to provide dignified employment to survivors in a trauma-informed way. After several educational trips to Thistle Farms in Nashville learning the ropes of creating a justice enterprise, we founded The Worthy Co in 2018 to employ and empower survivors of trafficking in Fort Worth.
In 2020
despite the challenges posed by this year, we had the privilege of opening Fort Worth’s first non-profit brick and mortar store in October to expand employment opportunities for the survivors we serve. The Worthy Co Headquarters houses our production and manufacturing facility as well as a retail storefront where the community can shop goods that give 100% back to the mission.