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    As the Recession Puts More Women at Risk, Local Governments Slash Funding for Domestic Violence Survivors

    The Nation -- After Chad Taylor, the district attorney of Shawnee County in Topeka, Kansas, had his budget cut by the County Commission last month, he announced that he no longer had the financial resources to pursue misdemeanor domestic violence cases, essentially handing them off to the city. The City Council, in turn, voted last week to decriminalize domestic violence so that it didn’t have to pay up. This put the ball back in Taylor’s court; he now says he will review cases sent to him by Topeka police and pursue them on a case-by-case basis. During the game of hot potato suspected abusers walked free -- reports range from 18-30 people. Happy Domestic Violence Awareness Month.

    But the back-and-forth is not without its consequences for victims of domestic violence, even if abusers eventually suffer the consequences. “There are two messages,” says Joyce Grover, Executive Director of the Kansas Coalition Against Domestic Violence. “One, that it’s not a priority, and two, that it’s not very serious.” For the abused, those are both dangerous things to hear. “You don’t have someone sitting in the home of a battered woman explaining to her what that means when she calls the police,” Grover explains. “All they hear is that we’re not going to prosecute this, your batterers aren’t going to suffer the consequences.”

    Budget cuts hit the vulnerable hardest, and Topeka is just one example in which funding to address domestic violence has increasingly been targeted in light of tight budgets at the federal, state, and local level. Three quarters of shelters nationally report losing money from government sources since the recession. But attacks on these services couldn’t come at a worse time. In a study released by Mary Kay in April, 80 percent of shelters nationwide reported an increase in domestic violence cases for the third straight year. Three out of four shelters attributed the violence to victims’ financial issues; almost half said that those issues included job loss and 42 percent cited the loss of a house or car. More than half of shelters also report that domestic abuse is more violent than it was before the crash. The recession is taking its toll, and it’s sadly not surprising. Studies show that abuse is three times as likely to occur when a couple experiences financial strain; when a man experienced two or more periods of unemployment over a five-year study, he was almost three times as likely to abuse his female partner.

    Just as the need is rising, funds are falling. That’s just what’s happened to the Cherokee Family Violence Center in Canton, Georgia, where Executive Director Meg Rogers reports having had to completely cancel programming for the 120 children living in its transitional housing, fire three staff members, and furlough full-time staff two days out of every month in response to the loss of funds. Meanwhile, her staff hasn’t seen a raise in three years. Some of the loss is due to decreased funds coming from hard-strapped partners in the community; some is related to flat-lined or slashed money from grant programs at the federal and state level; some of it comes from reimbursement funds from the federal government that get delayed during budget showdowns. “You can carry maybe a program for three months waiting to get money, but we can’t finance nine months of operations,” she says.

    Her struggles don’t end there: next on the chopping block may be the center’s safe house, which provides shelter for 12 women and their children and requires 24-hour-a-day staffing. “We’ve always had a shelter,” she says. “But we’re seeing [victims] stay longer because they can’t get jobs, can’t afford housing, and we have a six-month waiting list for transitional housing. We have to put everything on the table.” Rogers and her staff are weighing whether keeping this shelter open or investing that money in transitional housing programs makes a bigger difference for women and children in their community. “You really have to be able to make some really hard decisions about how you can help the most people in the most impactful way,” she says.

    Back in Kansas, Grover also reports that services throughout the state have seen a 25 percent cut in state support. So the Kansas Coalition Against Domestic Violence is cutting back on programs to reach new areas. “It’s the outreach offices, the 24-hour lines in very rural communities” that are suffering, Grover says, even though a study in 2007 showed three out of five victims in the state weren’t aware of how to access services. “When Congress makes [budget] decisions," she says, “they really do have an impact on our local community.”

    At the same time, shelters may experience a drought in private donations. No One Alone, a shelter and support services organization in Dahlonega, Georgia, has seen “a significant decrease in individual donations” and less funding across the board to nonprofit organizations and partners, says executive director Marina Barron. In response, it has kicked up its fundraising efforts, but budgets are tight. “My staff and I are doing more with less funding,” she says. But she adds, “As these folks are even more vulnerable during a recession, they need additional help in term of emergency financial assistance, emotional support, and trauma services.” Even budgets that stay level can threaten programs. While the budget for New York City’s domestic violence services hasn’t decreased, rising costs mean, for instance, that a project to help victims stay in their homes safely has had to reduce the number of locks changed yearly from 2,000 to 1,000, says Nathaniel Fields, senior vice president at Safe Horizon.

    All the domestic violence advocates I spoke to report seeing an increase in both instances of abuse and the level of violence on the ground. Lack of employment and housing options bear some of the blame; if a woman can’t support and house her family, she may choose to stay in a dangerous situation longer, increasing the chance that an abusive situation will escalate.“Financial stability and financial resources in terms of jobs and support are just incredibly critical pieces of victims moving on with their lives,” Grover says. As services that these women relied on are cut back, they may once again find themselves reliant on their abusers. “My fear is that that they may turn to their abuser or abuser’s family to help them with rides, to help them with child care, some of these services that they’ve been using at our agency,” Rogers worries.

    Scaling services back has severe consequences for the lives of the victims, but it also has consequences for society as a whole. It certainly has economic ramifications. Many studies have confirmed that domestic violence services are highly cost-effective; one such study of shelter services in Kingman, Arizona reported that each dollar invested had returns of $6.80 to $18.40. But it also has larger implications: pointing to the recent story of a California man who was battling his ex-wife for custody and shot her and seven others to death in a hair salon, Grover notes that “domestic violence impacts the entire community.”

    Shelters are doing their best to work with reduced budgets and still continue the core services for the victims they serve. But this should not be a place where policymakers look to cut corners. Federal lawmakers should keep these victims in mind as they consider more discretionary cuts; without government aid, states, counties, and individual shelters will have to cut back. Support and awareness for crimes of domestic and sexual violence have made significant gains over recent decades. But as Grover points out, “We all woke up the day after the district attorney made this announcement and wondered just how solid were the things we had worked for.” With increased violence and decreased economic security, women can hardly stand to watch us backslide now. It is shameful that “in a country this wealthy, families have to choose between safety and what they can afford,” Rogers says.

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    23 comments

    • shea  •  7 mths ago
      instead of decriminalizing domestic violence. lets decriminalize recreational drug use!

      as a former victim, i know i was responsible for being involved with that man. however, it was not ok.
      • rectifier 7 mths ago
        Recreational drug use is what is responsible for a lot of domestic violence. I don't know anyone who had domestic violence in their lives that didn't include drugs (including alcohol). Also, no one is suggesting decriminilizing domestic violence.
      • Just Me, Richard 7 mths ago
        If there aren't enough police to go around and the court system is jammed and the jails are overflowing, decriminalizing the non-violent "victimless" crimes makes more sense. So what? We're going to ignore domestic violence so there will be more police and jail space for weed smokers? There's something backwards to that.
    • ROFLMAO  •  Houston, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Arm yourselves, ladies. Maybe time for vigilante justice?
      After all, the good ole boys want everyone to carry a gun.
      • rectifier 7 mths ago
        My wife has a Mossberg 590 tactical shotgun. So what's your point?
      • Yahooligan 7 mths ago
        Sopareyou... typical #$%$ mentality of the woman-like males that live in large cities......Police don't prevent crime, they never have... they show up after the fact don't they? If your too much of a coward to protect yourself, then don't. :)
      • ROFLMAO 7 mths ago
        Kane, I love the way you people make such stupid generalizations. I happen to be a 73 yr old, white, straight female who has lived around small town good ole boys most of my life. Many of them still think they own a woman, and have the right to "teach" her with violence. Coward? The men who beat women and children are the cowards. Almost every day, we hear of a woman KILLED by her husband or boyfriend.
        And Rectifier, I have a nice little .38 police revolver that I know how to use. My point is, if we can't count on law enforcement, we need to protect ourselves.
    • petal  •  Pleasanton, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Think, you fools. You kill the women and you've killed the human race.
      • rectifier 7 mths ago
        Oh, how dramatic, Petal. Do you really think ALL women will be killed if the federal government stops funding some friggin' programs? You are truly deluded.
      • AntonioA 7 mths ago
        Silly. All we have to do is freeze the eggs and use them as we wish.
      • Yahooligan 7 mths ago
        the last thing we need to spend money on is state employed unionionized public servants. Police don't protect anyone. They show up after the crime has been committed. In Illinois no one can carry a concealed weapon. The birth of the American Communist Party was in Chicago in 1919. It's not a coincidence
    • Paul Baack  •  Bloomingdale, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Assuming things aren't going to get better... If the police and the courts aren't going to protect you, you have to protect yourself. Purchase a gun. Learn how to use it. Be psychologically prepared to use it -- to kill, if need be. Try to always have a phone handy, so, when the rubber hits the road, you can at least dial 911 before doing what you have to (legal #$%$covering).And make sure your batterer doesn't -- can't! -- find it, lest it be used on you.
      • Just Me, Richard 7 mths ago
        If you feel that insecure, you should have already been making plans to leave. If you can't do it yourself, there are organizations that will help. Sitting around scared and paranoid with a loaded gun is just asking for trouble. Once you have bought the gun and prepared yourself, you are only one step away from using it.
    • OTTO  •  7 mths ago
      Great. Now all the fringe malcontents can beat their wives with impunity. A real Tea Party Christmas.

      Just another one of the advantages of "getting government out of our lives."

      The US already has the highest child neglect and abuse problem. Domestic abuse is just
      another notch in the belt for government minimalists.
      • Makingadifferenceeveryday 7 mths ago
        That is just so, so sick!
      • Doug S 7 mths ago
        What makes you think it's the tea partiers beating their wives? Oh, because liberals are NICE PEOPLE, they would NEVER do anything like that, right ?
      • josephl 7 mths ago
        Get some balls stop being a victim.
    • Jedi Master Mhathan  •  7 mths ago
      Republicans will tell you to buy a gun.
    • TODD O  •  Tyler, United States  •  7 mths ago
      i've never put my hands on a woman but yet they want the bad boys. who end up being abusive. so why do nice guys finish last ?
    • Henry Juhala  •  7 mths ago
      This is just one example of the kinds of budget cuts the tea party and the GOP are aiming for. Notice also the number of private and independent sources who used to help but which have stopped funding programs like this. The net result is not just a cut in basic services. What is being cut now are critical services at a time when the need is greatest. The net result is even more people being laid off from charities and agencies like this and put on the unemployment roles.

      There was an implicit understanding when Reagan made his huge tax breaks for the rich that they would in turn invest it in places and services that provided safety net avenues like this one. In lieu of the government taxing them, they promised to privately help fund these kinds of programs directly either as individuals or as charity from their companies. The same implicit understanding was made with the Bush tax cuts and the continued extension of the Bush tax cuts. The very rich and businesses promised with lower taxes they would privately have more money to help take care of these kinds of needs. The truth is they are not and never did.

      It was all an elaborate and deliberate attempt by the GOP to keep taxes down with no intention of helping out the poor and needy in lieu of tax dollars to the government. One of the ways they also promised to help is to use the money they kept in lieu of taxes to be sure that every man and woman in America who wanted to work would have jobs. The companies and individuals that got the big tax cuts have failed on all accounts. Yet, they want to increase on the same path of cutting one government program after another and give even more tax breaks to the richest in America.

      As well, it is these programs that are being cut that necessitate laying off more and more people. The more the tea party seeks to cut programs at the federal level, the more there will be no more government funds or grant money for local programs like this. It is just one more way for the heartless redistribution of the wealth from the poorest to the rich while totally overlooking the social safety net needs of our basic citizens.

      It is not just programs for women at risk that are being cut. Talk to any social and charitable or even government run safety net agency. People who run homeless shelters will tell you the need has never been so great yet people are giving less and less. The same is true for programs to help with energy assistance or job search housing transition or low cost housing or help for the handicapped or those displaced by recent tragedy or acts of God. The funds that used to be there just are not there. Funds from churches and individuals are drying up. About the only thing that seems to be getting continued and growing support are food pantries. But, with even growing demand for food pantry services it will make it hard for everyone to meet the need.

      Worse, funds from the government are going away or being drastically cut for most social safety-net programs. At every turn it is getting worse. The government makes program cuts that the rich tea party and GOP insist the private sector will pick up the slack for. But, instead of picking up the slack, where the private and non-profit sector used to pick up the slack, they are no longer doing so. They have grown cold, callous and are turning a blind eye to the needs of their neighbors. It is becoming one big mess out there with little hope. Soon the 1930s will look like a wonderful dream to us if we continue to let this kind of long-term heartless tragey get worse.
    • Just Me, Richard  •  Knoxville, United States  •  7 mths ago
      My ex-mother-in-law [a black woman] kept reporting her husband for domestic violence. Since he was running an illegal "splo" house in Knoxville, and was paying the police on time, they police never did anything about it. This situation is somewhat comparable with not prosecuting domestic abuse. So one day Mildred shot the #$%$ 6 times at close range with a .45 -- and the court threw out the case. I'm not advocating shooting people, but after a few years of physical abuse that is ignored by the "justice" system, I am not surprised when someone shoots in self defense. So watch out, Topeka! You might be looking at an increase in fatalities. If you think it's "too expensive" and "too much trouble" to deal with domestic violence, just wait till you get the bill for all the manslaughter cases.
    • L  •  Meriden, United States  •  7 mths ago
      It is easy to say that government should cut spending, but what that translates to is cutting services, including important services. That is why you see riots occur. Too many people think that government spending can be slashed to keep taxes low by simply eliminating inefficiencies or cutting back on expenditures that they personally do not benefit from. It is not that simple. If services are important enough to keep, then people have to be willing to pay taxes to pay for the services.

      Think about it from government services you can easily relate to at the state or town level. Which expenses would you cut or eliminate: public education, police or fire, highway or town road maintenance, medicaid, courts, unemployment payments, prisons, motor vehicle offices, public parks, etc.? Many of the smaller budgeted items might be more readily cut, such as town day care services, but expense of that type are a small drop in the bucket in times of budget cuts.
    • Garr Obo  •  Warren, United States  •  7 mths ago
      More women should take up the practice of pistol-shooting. That might slow things down a bit.
    • Raymond  •  7 mths ago
      I recently retired from police work after 31 years with one of the top ten cities in the country. They might as well cut it because what started off as a well intentioned program has become just another failure where the victim wants to drop charges, doesn't show up for court or they plea bargain the thing away. These couples get back together and now they know they can use the police against the other party by just calling and accusing them of assault whether it happened or not.
    • Greta  •  Phoenix, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Maybe the GOP in the house and senate and each GOP legeslatures of state should be charged as acomplices to each murder that acures because of the lack of funding because they cut funding for these services and the police forses. California just had 7 and theres more to count.
    • lawrence  •  Houston, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Barack Hussein Obama II our president that got his basic education in an Indonesian Muslin maddasus would have a good answer for that problem.
    • nothanx  •  7 mths ago
      FACT: 50% or more of domestic violence (spouse or "significant other" assaults) are perpetrated by women. This is confirmed by hundreds of valid studies, the authors of which are sometimes threatened with discontinuation of funding for being politically incorrect (this means saying what powerful people don't want to hear). Part of the poison that the women's groups spew is the blatantly false allegation that 95% of DV is perpetrated by men against women. The women's groups have promoted this lie for so long now, many people, including men, actually believe it.
    • Walter N  •  7 mths ago
      Maybe the people who are wasting their time in the occupy movement (they will change nothing) move over to demonstrating against programs and services that federal, state and local goverment pay for which does nothing for anybody, take for instance the money spent on the NEA, the Endowment for the arts, and any number of programs which serve only those who design them. Maybe even eliminate a few of the ridiclious grants by federal and state govements.
    • josephl  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  7 mths ago
      If women are equal and can do everything a man can do...why is this a womens issue?
    • Kelly  •  7 mths ago
      We have a local weekly arrest news paper here. Usually about 6 arrested a week for criminal domestic violence. On average I would say 4 of the 6 arrested are cute petite blonds.
    • AntonioA  •  Harlingen, United States  •  7 mths ago
      How many women's groups and individual women donate to these programs around the country? Why must the government fund everything for women and their breedlings? Where is NOW and the rest of them?
    • Harryo  •  7 mths ago
      Women have to learn to stop harming their husbands.
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