Families in and around Fort Worth can add their family court, child welfare, custody, GAL, attorney, evaluator, or local agency experience to the Stand With Meg public registry. The pattern shows up faster when Fort Worth families compare notes.
We see families in Fort Worth typing the panic-search version of this. Stand With Meg is a public registry — not a lawyer directory — so use it to inform your search and verify everything yourself.
The Texas report stays free for every family and lawmaker who reads it because businesses sponsor the work. A sponsor isn't buying an ad — they're the reason a struggling family doesn't have to pay. One state-exclusive sponsor gets the spotlight in Texas — once it's taken, it's gone. Every sponsor is reviewed for mission fit.
Know the businesses in your community? Become a state partner and earn recurring income connecting local businesses to the reports families read and send to lawmakers.

Take the My Stand With Meg survey to add a Fort Worth, TX case to the public registry, search the court actor registry for judges, attorneys, GALs, evaluators, and agencies, and view the public report for Texas totals and quotes.
No. Stand With Meg is a public registry and report, not a lawyer directory and not legal advice. Families use it to see the pattern, point to data, and decide what to do next on their own or with their counsel.
Only the parts you allow. The survey supports anonymous, first-name-only, public, and data-only options. Court actor names follow the existing independent-family threshold before they become public.
Child welfare and CPS cases are part of the same registry. The report separates due process concerns and pattern indicators so child welfare and family court cases can both be tracked.