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VAWA and VOCA: Advocacy Points Allison Randall National Network to End Domestic Violence
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The Violence Against Women Act First passed in 1994 and reauthorized in 2000; unanimously reauthorized in 2005 Serves victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault and stalking nationwide Serves women, men and children Is intended to make systemic change to end domestic and sexual violence
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Congressional Support Last year, Congress requested increased funding for key VAWA programs – $100.4 million in the House and $49.9 million in the Senate. The final Congressional Budget included 17.3 million new dollars for VAWA programs. Why is Congress so supportive of VAWA…?
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VAWA is Effective VAWA programs are a good investment – they save lives and money. Domestic violence has declined. Homicides have decreased 24% for women and 48% for men. Non-fatal assaults have decreased 63%. VAWA ’94 saved taxpayers at least $14.8 billion in net averted social costs in its first 6 years. Since VAWA ’94, there has been a 27-51% increase in reporting rates of DV.
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Demand for Services is Rising The success of VAWA has lead many more victims to come forward and request help. As we train police or conduct outreach, more people learn about our services and gain the courage to ask for help. Calls to the National Domestic Violence Hotline increased 10% last year, and nearly 30,000 calls went unanswered due to increased call volume. Children as young as 18 months are on waiting lists to receive treatment and therapy following sexual assault.
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VAWA-Funded Programs – Making a Difference In one day alone, 1,346 domestic violence programs (69%): Served 53,203 individuals; Trained an additional 29,902; and Answered 20,582 hotline calls. Tragically, 7,707 individuals had to be turned away because shelters were full or resources were limited.
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VAWA: A Comprehensive Response Criminal & Civil Justice Services & Intervention Children & Youth Prevention/Early Intervention VAWA works efficiently to stretch funding across communities
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Authorization vs Appropriation After a bill is passed, Congress must fund it in their Congressional Budget They decide this year by year The amounts authorized in a bill are not binding – Congress can appropriate more funding, less funding, or none at all It’s easy to pass a bill, but hard to secure appropriations for it!
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Critical Programs & Exciting Opportunities In the Labor/Health and Human Services Budget: Emergency Domestic Violence Shelters Long-Term Stability for Victims Prevention and Early Intervention Rape Prevention and Education Linking with Health Care Providers Addressing Child Abuse
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Critical Programs & Exciting Opportunities In the Commerce, Justice, Science Budget: Rural Grants Sexual Assault Services Program Legal Assistance for Victims Children and Youth Transitional Housing STOP Grants
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The President’s Budget Request The President’s FY 09 Budget Request proposes— eliminating individual VAWA programs and creating one block grant instead cutting $120 million from VAWA This disastrous plan has already been rejected by many Members of Congress.
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What’s Next? The House and Senate are drafting their appropriations bills This is a critical time period, and our best opportunity! Congress actually cares what YOU have to say Bills will be introduced in May & June; amendments this summer; final bill may not be done until next year
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Our Ask: Fully Fund VAWA in FY ’09 Ask your Senators and Representatives to fully fund VAWA programs Tell your story – make it real for them Talk about needs and successes Ask what they are going to do to support increased funding of the Violence Against Women Act
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What is the Crime Victims Fund? Created in 1984 as revenue source for the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) to support state victim assistance and crime victim compensation. Separate account; self-sufficient. Paid entirely by Federal criminal offenders; no taxpayer dollars. Only Federal funding for direct services to victims of all types of crimes.
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Unlike other programs… Permanent authorization, no sunset. Continuing appropriation. Cap on Fund delays amounts otherwise available for obligation. Unobligated amounts remain in Fund for future victim services.
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How Crime Victims Fund works… Services Year OneYear Two Crime Victims Fund
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State Victim Assistance Grants 56 jurisdictions grant: base $+ % pop. 4,400 public and nonprofit agencies… provide direct victim assistance services… to 3.8 million victims of all types of crimes each year. crisis intervention and counseling support groups and therapy/treatment emergency shelter Information/referral and hotlines legal advocacy and emergency financial assist. criminal justice system (case status/disposition information, restitution assistance) personal advocacy and case management
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Fund Deposits/Caps 1985-2007 = $9 Billion Est. FY 09 Opening Balance $1.9 Billion
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FY ’08 Cuts to VOCA The VOCA cap was lowered by 6% last year due to an across-the-board cut made to all DOJ programs This is a $35 million loss for VOCA DOJ also plans to take additional ~$40 for their management and administrative costs This devastating cut to services will be felt over the next several years
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2009 President’s Budget Request Rescinds $2.024 billion. Sets cap at $590 million (maintaining the 6% cut made in FY ’08). Includes $50 million Antiterrorism Emergency Reserve “under the cap.” Transforms Fund from special account into revenue-offset account.
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$2.024 billion Rescission Opening balance, 2009 (“rainy day” balance) $1,904 plus amounts to be collected during 2009 710 2,614 less new budget authority (cap) -590 less rescission-2,024 Opening balance, 2010-0- What happens in 2010?
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VOCA Program Funding $625 $254 $371 $590 $301 $289 20062008 est. $625 2007 $229 $396 Cap Other VOCA Programs/ OJP Costs State Victim Assistance Grants $770* $374 $396 2009 est. In millions * Includes $ 50 million AER $590* $354 $236 2009 Request
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VOCA Program Funding $625 $254 $371 $590 $301 $289 20062008 est. $625 2007 $229 $396 Cap Other VOCA Programs/ OJP Costs State Victim Assistance Grants $770* $374 $396 2009 est. In millions * Includes $ 50 million AER $590* $354 $236 2009 Request VOCA Victim Assistance Grants cut by $159 million (40%) since 2006 VOCA Victim Assistance Grants cut by $159 million (40%) since 2006
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Fund Availability $1.3b
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Restore VOCA Assistance $770 million cap = FY 2006 state victim assistance grants. $717 million cap, if AER kept above the cap. $677 million cap, if OJP M&A direct appropriation ($32.4 million). Money already collected from Federal offenders and kept in Fund to maintain stable funding for victim services. Does not include increases in: Crime rates. Demands for services. Types of crimes (e.g. stalking, human trafficking, identity theft, etc.). Costs of operations (e.g. gas, heat/utilities, stamps, etc.). Direct funding for state victim assistance grants.
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What the FY ’08 Cut Means… According to a survey by the National Center for Victims of Crime: Many grant recipients will turn away victims needing services Some will lose staff Some programs will close entirely
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Our Ask: Restore VOCA Tell staff that there’s another COMPLETELY DIFFERENT issue you want to talk about: VOCA Remind them it’s not taxpayer dollars If your state is getting a cut this year, tell them what it means for you Ask them to raise the cap on the VOCA fund to “restore victim assistance to FY ’06 levels”
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Want to know more? We have lots of materials that explain the appropriations process or provide more detail about VAWA, VOCA and how to lobby: www.nnedv.org/funding www.nnedv.org/funding Call your state DV and SA coalitions for advice and information Do whatever Randi says!
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Ash says “thank you” (and yes you can use VAWA funds to help keep pets safe)
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