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Tragedies Spark Worker-Safety Awareness

Many Think Client Violence 'Won't Happen Here'

Violence or threats of violence are reasonably common for social workers during their careers.

The deaths of a young woman, a troubled teenager and the murder of social worker Greg Gaul on an icy day late in January brought almost unbearable shock and grief to the Des Moines social work community and the entire city.

It also renewed the questions of whether social workers and their agencies are doing enough to protect those who deal with clients who are sometimes unstable and occasionally violent or intent on homicide and whether emphasis on safety could limit social workers' ability to be effective with clients.

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Gaul was "beloved," the kind of social worker others aspire to be, said his business partner John Stanley. "Most don't have the same amount of qualities Greg had in abundance — the patience and kindness."

The former seminarian had an uncommon amount of success for his 41 years. An MSW graduate of the University of Minnesota, four years ago he helped start Lifeworks, a successful agency that contracts with the State of Iowa to provide in-home child welfare and juvenile justice services.

He was a well-known and well-respected figure among the law enforcement officials, attorneys, judges, social workers, educators and juvenile offenders in the Des Moines area.

"Greg and I started a business together with the philosophy that many people didn't have opportunities and need to have doors opened for them and that the basis of therapy is to be kind and gentle to people," said Stanley.

Gaul had a wife and six children age 10 and under, with another child expected in the spring. Yet he found time to be active in his church and to be a baseball coach, Cub Scout leader and black belt in tae kwon do, involving his children in his pastimes, and he volunteered at a prison for women.

He bought his shoes and shirts at a Salvation Army thrift store. "He was a casual guy. That's what helped people relate to him," said Stanley.

"But he took very seriously what he did. Everyone who came in contact with Greg felt he gave something of himself to them."

Friends don't remember what he was wearing his last day alive.

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