Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From: david@...
[mailto:david@...] Sent: Tuesday, October 06, 2009 2:13 PM To: terri@... Subject: Action Alert: Urge State Lawmakers to End the Budget Impasse
NOW!
PANO
Policy Alert - Please Act Now
98
days
…and
still no state budget!
Nearly
100 days with no state budget. Thousands of nonprofits servicing state and
county contracts and grants are being forced to lay-off staff, cut services
or close their doors. Children, the elderly and Pennsylvanian's with
special needs are losing vital services. For nonprofits and the
communities they serve, this budget impasse has been devastating.Â
Budget Impasse Update:Â This past weekend, House Democrats challenged the
3-Caucus budget deal with a new proposal of their own. This new proposal
would not tax nonprofit arts events or small games of chance, but would
cut another $100 million in funding from the budget. TODAY- the House
disbanded the Budget Conference Committee and plans to send the budget to the
House Rules Committee immediately. If there is a compromise, it could take a
week to pass the budget. If not, it could be weeks before we have a budget.
House Democrats blame Senate Republican. Senate Republicans blame the
Governor. Rank and file lawmakers blame leadership. There is more than
enough blame for all to share. As we approach 100 days without a state
budget, Pennsylvania lawmakers continue to receive their paychecks and per
diems, while nonprofits close their doors. This is unacceptable.
The Problem:The
lack of a state budget is hurting Pennsylvania's nonprofits and those
they serve. As nonprofits close their doors, thousands of children, the
elderly and Pennsylvanian's with special needs are no longer
receiving the services they depend on. Many nonprofits are laying-off
staff, cuttings services, and reaching their credit limits. For nonprofits
with credit remaining, operating under those lines of credit adds to the cost
of doing business, and limits available resources for future services. For nonprofits
that contract with the state or receive state grants, the damage from this
budget impasse has been devastating.Â
The Pennsylvania Charitable Nonprofit Caucus:
For months, PANO has been actively mobilizing nonprofits statewide to end
this budget Impasse. PANO convened the Pennsylvania Charitable Nonprofit Caucus on
September 15 to discuss the impact of the budget impasse on nonprofits, the
need to expedite payment once a budget is passed, and how to prevent this in
the future. As a result of this meeting, Caucus legislators agreed to
introduce a Resolution calling for prompt payment. A Caucus Task Force is
pursuing other solutions to prevent the budget impasse from happening next
year. contact david@... to work with this task.
We must not let nonprofits become collateral damage of future budgets negotiations.
(see the Caucus meeting photos at http://www.flickr.com/photos/paassociation/sets/72157622314320297/.)
Pennsylvania
needs a budget now; a fair budget
One
that will allow nonprofits to continue their important community work.
What can you do?
Join
us at the Capitol: Press conference – Thurs, Oct.
8, 2009. Help us mark the 100th day without a state budget.Â
Plan to join us (tentatively 1pm). Watch for
details.
·Send us your stories: Send us your one-page written
statements on how the budget impasse has hurt your organization. Please
include how many people were laid-off and whether your organization cut
services or close its doors. Send your vignettes to david@.... We plan to post these on our
website and share them with legislators.
Pennsylvania
Association of Nonprofit Organizations (PANO)
777
East Park Drive, Suite 300 | Harrisburg, PA 17111 | p(717) 236-8584 x1009 |
f(717) 236-8767 | david@... | www.pano.org
PANO,
your partner for nonprofit excellence.
PANO
is the statewide membership organization serving and advancing the charitable
nonprofit sector through leadership, advocacy, education and services in
order to improve the quality of life in Pennsylvania. PANO, your
partner for nonprofit excellence. Your strength and capacity is
directly and indirectly linked to your voice in the political process.
PANO offers an opportunity to develop skills and make connections between you
and your elected officials. PANO offers numerous services to our
members to increase their capacity. Visit www.pano.org/benefits.php
for more information. Please join today if you are not already a
member!
This e-mail was sent from Pennsylvania Association Of Nonprofit Organizations
(david@...) to terri@....
To unsubscribe, please click on this link and follow the instructions:
Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From: david@...
[mailto:david@...] Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2009 11:07 AM To: terri@... Subject: PANO Action Alert re: Budget Impass and Policy Update
 Budget Impasse Update: The Governor and the Legislature reached a compromise
deal on a state budget last week, but we still have no budget, and we haven’t
even seen the actual language of the deal. Legislators spent the week
refining the general
appropriations bill, and drafting
the legislation needed to raise the taxes being spent in the budget,
authorize casinos table games, and tap into the reserve fund. What details
we have on the budget, has caused sharp reaction from many groups. A final
vote on the budget is not expected until next week. In the meantime,
organizations continue to lay-off staff, cut services, and max-out their
lines of credit. For those with credit left, operating under those lines of
credit adds to the cost of doing business, which limits available resources
for future services. As the Legislature continues to drag its feet, the risk
increases that the budget deal itself could start to unravel.
The Pennsylvania Charitable Nonprofit Caucus:Â
For months, PANO has been actively mobilizing nonprofits statewide to work as
a broad coalition urging lawmakers back to the budget negotiating table. On
September 15 PANO convened the Pennsylvania Charitable Nonprofit Caucus
to discuss the impact of the budget impasse on nonprofits, how to prevent it
in the future, and once a budget is passed , how to expedite payment so nonprofits
don’t have to wait another three or four weeks to receive payment they are
owed. At this meeting, (see photos) the Caucus legislators agreed to
introduce a Resolution calling for prompt payment. A Caucus Task Force is
pursuing other solutions to prevent the budget impasse from happening next
year. We can not let nonprofits become collateral damage of future budgets
negotiations. View 9/15/09 Caucus meeting photos at http://www.flickr.com/photos/paassociation/sets/72157622314320297/.
Learn more about the Caucus at http://www.pano.org/publicpolicy/publicpolicy-caucus.php.
Sales Tax on Nonprofit Arts Tickets:Â By now you have heard
about the proposed sales tax on arts tickets being considered to balance the
state budget. Tickets to nonprofit arts events, museums, theatres and zoos
would be taxed at 6 or 7%. Yet tickets to movies and sports events would not
be taxed. Taxing nonprofits in any form is just a bad idea, especially for
nonprofits like the arts where funding and public contributions are way down.
Together, PANO and the Philadelphia Cultural Alliance have opposed sales tax
expansion since 2005. This time it’s the arts. Next time it could be your
nonprofit. We urge you to take action.www.philaculture.org/action/legislator.
Taxing Small Games of Chance:
Just announced this week, is a new proposal to tax small games of chance.Â
Many organizations supplement their revenue with punch boards, raffle tickets
and pull tabs. The Legislature’s intent is to not tax churches,
church-related functions, or Bingo. Instead, all private clubs and veterans
organizations that operate these games and have liquor licenses, would be
subject to a 6% tax on the net profits from these games. Whether the
bill will tax only organizations with liquor licensees, is still being
debated. We will not know the result until the bill
comes out of committee. Some private clubs, also devastated by the economy
are counting on this much needed expanded gaming revenue to help maintain
their facilities. For others, it’s a matter of survival.
Earned income Tax Credit: The EITC program
provides a 75%-90% tax credit for businesses that make contributions to
Educational Improvement Organizations (EIOs) or scholarship organizations.
This program helps businesses enhance children’s educational opportunities
while reducing their tax liability. To date, over 3,600 companies have
pledged over $350 million to these programs, which last year served over
44,000 children. The proposed budget could cut large portions of the EITC.Â
Local Educational Improvement Organizations like literacy councils and family
support centers would be forced to eliminate critical services that help
children enter school ready to learn, not to mention, lay-off staff or close
their doors.
The Issue:The
lack of a state budget is hurting Pennsylvania's nonprofits and those
they serve. Many nonprofits are laying-off staff and cuttings services.
As nonprofits close their doors, thousands of children, elderly and
Pennsylvanian's with special needs will no longer receive the
services they depend on. Pennsylvania needs a budget now; a fair budget that will
allow nonprofits to continue their important community work now and next
year. Urge lawmakers to end the budget impasse now! Expedite payments,
and work to ensure that this never happens again.Â
What can you do?
Contact
your State Legislators & share this with your network!
Send us
your stories: Send us a one-page written statement on
how your organization has been hurt by the budget impasse; how many
people were laid-off and whether your organization cut services or close
its doors. Send your vignettes to david@....
PANO is the statewide membership
organization serving and advancing the charitable nonprofit sector through
leadership, advocacy, education and services in order to improve the quality
of life in Pennsylvania. PANO, your partner for nonprofit excellence. Your
strength and capacity is directly and indirectly linked to your voice in the
political process. PANO offers an opportunity to develop skills and make
connections between you and your elected officials. PANO offers numerous
services to our members to increase their capacity. Please visit www.pano.org/benefits.phpÂ
for more information. Please join today if you are not already a member!
This e-mail was sent from Pennsylvania Association Of Nonprofit Organizations
(david@...) to terri@....
To unsubscribe, please click on this link and follow the instructions:
We
are scheduled for the Adams County Commissioners to proclaim October Domestic
Violence Awareness Month and to read a proclamation. Please join
us! New this year, the Commissioners office is requesting a head count of
how many folks we think will attend, so please RSVP to me at this email or to Sharon
Ramage at sharon@...
by Friday the 25th.
I
hope to see you there! The Gettysburg Times will be there so it would be great
to have a strong showing of support for the photo. Please feel free to
forward this widely.
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
Here is a
link that allows you to quickly send an email to everyone on the budget
committee who needs to hear how this impasse is impacting us.
http://www.co.somerset.pa.us/
Click the orange button (upper left hand corner) and then click
Take Action Now Be sure to customize the message for your county.
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on the web! http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From:
Articles@... [mailto:Articles@...] Sent: Tuesday, August 18, 2009 12:37 PM Subject: Budgeet Update: Capitolwire: Senate to vote Wednesday on $2.1
bil
HARRISBURG (Aug. 18) - Senate
Republican leaders said today they will vote tomorrow to add more than $2.1
billion in state spending to the budget by overriding up to 16 of Gov. Ed
Rendell's line item vetoes in the current state "bridge" budget.
That plan emerged even as both
sides said progress had been made in budget talks but the sides are still about
$1 billion apart. Senate Republicans still are saying their top spending offer
is $27.6 billion. Recent House Democratic and gubernatorial proposals add up to
$28.6 billion, in terms of programs contained in last year's budget.
Both sides said table games
and a potential cigarette tax hike were part of the revenue discussions, but
that another billion dollars of combined cuts or revenues separated the
negotiators and prolonged the budget impasse.
That was the background as the
Senate announced it would try to restore state funding for most of the programs
Rendell blue-lined earlier this month and highlighted in a series of events the
last two weeks.
"The governor vetoed a
lot of services that people need now," said Senate Appropriations Chairman
Jake Corman, R-Centre. "So we feel let's get the [bridge budget-contained]
numbers out to people now, particularly the ones where the Senate and governor
agreed. And then where there are differences, we can negotiate about them
later, without closing the doors on vital services."
House
Democrats could not immediately be reached for comment on the Senate GOP plan.
As late as Monday, both sides said leaders had continued meeting and that
progress was being made.
But
the planned veto overrides could shift the pressure to keep open day-care
centers, run children's health care programs and provide college loans to House
Democrats. They will now either have to override Rendell's vetos as well, or
explain why they will not.
Up
until today, Rendell has blamed Senate Republicans for not agreeing to his
higher budget spending figures. Now the Senate GOP and House GOP will pressure
the House Democrats to schedule a line-item veto vote.
Senate President Pro Tem Joe
Scarnati, R-Jefferson said: "The governor wants a crisis atmosphere to
give himself leverage in the budget negotiations - he said so directly, when he
vetoed those programs. The votes on Wednesday to override his vetos will be the
first step in ensuring that vital state programs are not shut down while the
overall budget negotiations continue."
House GOP Spokesman Steve
Miskin said the actions of Senate Republicans would shift the blame for the
funding delays away from their party.
"If the Senate has the
vote to override some of these controversial vetoes, then any Democrat who does
not vote to override them becomes the face of those cuts and the target of
everyone losing those services," Miskin said. "Right now there's only
one person respon for blue-lining budget lines and depriving people of vital
services. If the Senate does this, and the House does not follow, the House
Democrats will join the governor in that dubious distinction."
The list of overrides is
expected to include 11 items where Senate Bill 850 contained the amount of
funding the governor originally sought, but blue-lined the programs anyway.
That list includes:
* State assistance to drug and
alcohol programs, $41.8 million;
* Homeless assistance, $25.6
million;
* State food purchase, for
food banks $18 million;
* Domestic Violence prevention
funding, $12.5 million
* Customized job training, $9
million;
* Rape crisis programs, $7.1
million;
* Veteran's Educational
Assistance, $8 million;
* Just under $5 million
combined for farmer's market coupons, veterans outreach services, veteran's
assistance and disabled veterans transportation.
A second list of proposed veto
overrides are for programs where the Senate proposed less than the governor and
legislative Democrats are willing to accept in state spending.
Senate Republicans expect to
vote to override the governor's vetos of the following line items:
Corman
noted that adding $2.1 billion to the $12.8 billion "bridge" budget
meant the state could afford the additional spending easily, and noted that
"the governor still has $12 billion worth of leverage, and we know how
important his leverage is to him."
Capitolwire.com, a service of
GovNetPA, Inc., provides a comprehensive news and information service to
subscribers with a need to monitor or influence the actions of state government
and to track key issues such as Healthcare, Transportation, Education and the
Environment. Our customization platform allows relevant news and
information to automatically flow directly to subscribers creating an awareness
and speed-of-response advantage.
If you liked this story, sign
up for a trial subscription.
Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From: NCADV
[mailto:mainoffice@...] Sent: Friday, August 14, 2009 3:12 PM To: terri@... Subject: More Outrage Needed
While we must be proud of our Secretary of State for demanding that the
rape and sexual violence in the Congo come to an END, offering US aid and
support, we must demand the same attention to this issue here at
home.
Where is our President, Vice President and the Cabinet members who deal
with our nation's laws, economy, safety and well-being? Yes, their
plates are full, but when our homes and communities are "killing
fields," girls and women facing the threat of domestic and sexual
violence (including death) deserve our attention. On this 15th
anniversary of the Violence Against Women Act, it's hard to think of it
as a "happy" birthday unless we are all committed to stopping
the violence.
Speak up, speak out. The National Task Force to End Sexual and
Domestic Violence will be reactivating and you'll be getting a notice
soon. In the meantime, help NCADV and our coalition partners demand
that Congress fully fund current anti violence programs. See below
* for an action people can take in their own states - collecting news
clippings of these tragedies and sending them to their elected
representatives and demanding action.
Thank you,
NCADV
Femicide: There's Not Enough Outrage
Published on Wednesday, August 12, 2009 by The Toronto Star
by Antonia Zerbisias
"There's not enough outrage," lamented one women's rights
activist at a candlelight vigil for the three women cut down last Tuesday
night in a Pittsburgh-area aerobics class.
As the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette noted, only 75 people showed up
to mourn Heidi Overmier, 46, Elizabeth Gannon, 49, and Jody Billingsley,
38, massacred by a man, who didn't know them, simply because they were
women.
That's unusual as the vast majority of femicide victims are killed by
their intimate partners or male relatives.
But, as Toronto author Brian Vallee points out in his 2007 book The
War on Women, nobody counts the dead, nobody connects the dots, nobody
calls out the problem.
"Compare the raw numbers," he writes of the period 2000-06.
"In the same seven-year period when 4,588 U.S. soldiers and police
officers were killed by hostiles or by accident, more than 8,000 women -
nearly twice as many - were shot, stabbed, strangled, or beaten to death
by the intimate males in their lives. In Canada, compared to the 101
Canadian soldiers and police officers killed, more than 500 women -
nearly five times as many - met the same fate."
There's not enough outrage.
As we all know now, George Sodini, 48 - whose racist and misogynist
online diary reads like a terrorist manifesto - couldn't get a date,
couldn't get sex, couldn't lure any women to his modest side-split
furnished with, as he points out in a spooky video, "Couch and
chair; they match. The women will really be impressed."
Well, they weren't.
And so Sodini's "exit plan" was to go down in history in a
blaze of gunfire, taking as many women with him as he could.
Just like Marc Lépine, who hated "the feminists" so much he
slaughtered 14 women at Montreal's École Polytechnique in 1989, just like
Charles Carl Roberts who executed Amish school girls three years ago,
and, arguably, even like Virginia Tech shooter Seung-Hui Cho, a reported
stalker of female students who took up-the-skirt photos, yet another
violent act of misogyny takes place.
No, no, we say. They were just loners, losers, crazies with guns.
There's not enough outrage.
That only feminist bloggers and a very few mainstream pundits called last
week's fitness club massacre the hate crime it was should jolt us out of
our sexist complacency.
"We profess to being shocked at one or another of these outlandish
crimes, but the shock wears off quickly in an environment in which the
rape, murder and humiliation of females is not only a staple of the news,
but an important cornerstone of the nation's
entertainment," The New York Times's Bob Herbert noted on
Friday.
"The mainstream culture is filled with the most gruesome forms of
misogyny, and pornography is now a multi-billion-dollar industry - much
of it controlled by mainstream U.S. corporations."
When I blogged about the massacre last week, my "men's rights
activist" regulars - whose comments did not get past the goderators
- expressed little or no sympathy.
Instead, they complained that "feminists" demand special
treatment for female victims of crime.
Two blog readers even pointed to the recent Wisconsin episode of the
philandering husband - who has since been charged with child and sexual
abuse - whose penis was glued to his abdomen by a trio of vengeful women
as somehow having equivalence to the Pittsburgh massacre.
Cruise the men's rights forums and you'll be shocked by the sickening
posts calling for the legal and sexual subservience of women and praising
Sodini as a "hero" and "for being a symbol for the
consequences of denying men sex ... But something like this has to
happen, perhaps hundreds of times over again, before feminists get the
message."
* Spouses and partners killing each other is happening in every
state. Today's WPost reports this Maryland tragedy: husband
stabs and kills "bubbly personality" wife in front of sobbing
teenage daughter.
Collect, or have your members collect, similar stories from their
newspaper and send them to our Senators and Representatives. Demand
that they speak out and fully fund current 'VAWA services and programs
and be part of a national campaign to end this killing.
. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/12/AR2009081202602.html
As
you are all aware, we are now closing out day 42 of the State Budget Crisis and
many essential services are scheduled to close in the next two weeks.
SCCAP’s shelter and services, WIC, CCIS, and many, many others. We
are hanging in there for now, but that will change tragically if the budget is
not passed and cash does not start to flow to nonprofit agencies once again.
Last
year, Survivors, Inc. sheltered over 585 women and children at Claudia House, a
22 bed facility that is in the heart of Adams County. Nearly 130 sexual
assault survivors received counseling and support, and many other folks
received hotline services and intervention from our agency. Think about
it- if we were to total up all the folks that received services, roughly 1000
individuals were served. That does not include the thousands of folks who
have participated in community education efforts and participated in trainings.
Adams County has 526 square miles. That means no matter what
direction you walk, drive, or bicycle, you could pass 2 victims that have accessed
our services to heal from abuse, and to heal their children. That is even
more striking if you realize that for every victim we know of, there or 5 to 10
individuals who have not reported, who have not reached out for help…
YET.
The
problem looms- very vulnerable people in one of the worst economies since the
Great Depression. What can we do? We CAN make our voices heard.
FIRST-
Please join us on Thursday August 13, 2009 at the Rec Park at 11am. Please
wear a black shirt to show your concern and mourning for this imposed and
unnecessary crisis. We will walk from the Charles Sterner Building to the
square, past Representative Moul’s office to the Courthouse and back to
the park. Please bring your coworkers, your friends, your family, everyone
you can. Please feel free to make and bring signs. Active participation
and a large turnout will help ensure success. WHP 21 (CBS), FOX 43, WGAL,
ACTV, the Gettysburg Times, the Evening Sun, and other news media have been
invited. We hope to see you there!
SECOND-
Please take a moment to contact your State Representatives (call and/or email) and
let them know how important having a safety net for vulnerable families,
vulnerable individuals is to you. Also attached is the members of the
Budget Committee, please let them know how devastating this crisis is to your
community. Please do not forget that so far 2009 fiscal year has been one
of the most violent with a murder last week in York, and a mass femicide in
Pittsburgh. Femicide is not limited to any zip code in PA.
PA State
Budget Conference Committee
Senator Dominic Pileggi
R- Chester/Delaware Counties
Senate Box 203009, Harrisburg PA 17120-3009 or 100 Evergreen
Drive, Suite 113, Glen Mills, PA 19342
To
find your local State Legislature Representative please click here, and enter
your info in the search box at the top right hand corner of the box. http://www.legis.state.pa.us/index.cfm
THIRD-
Please support your local charity of your choice, with gifts of time, financial
donations or continued advocacy….
Thank
you for your community advocacy!
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
“No State Budget” Impact Awareness Walk
When: Thursday, August 13th beginning at 11:00
am
Where: Meeting at Gettysburg Rec Park and walking
to/from the square
The purpose of the event will be to increase public
awareness of the direct negative impact that our state’s budget impasse is having
on all citizens of Adams County. TV and newspaper media have been
invited, and various agency representatives and consumers will be encouraged to
briefly share information on how the budget crisis is or will soon be impacting
them.
Please forward this email to your contacts who may be
interested in participating. The attached flyer may also be printed for
distribution and posting. Feel free to contact me with any questions,
comments or suggestions you may have, and we look forward to seeing you this
Thursday!
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 104
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From:
policy@... [mailto:policy@...] On Behalf Of Nicole
A. Lindemyer Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2009 11:01 AM To: undisclosed-recipients: Subject: Take Action Now! Oppose the Thune Amendment! Importance: High
(This message can be forwarded, and you are encouraged to
do so!)
While we must continue our advocacy on our state-level
revenue bills, there is also a federal issue that needs our urgent and
immediate action. Please read below, click on this "Take Action" link, and
make just two quick phone calls. The vote on the Thune Amendment is
expected to occur TOMORROW (WEDNESDAY, JULY 22). Senators Specter and
Casey will be critical to this vote, so your calls are urgently needed TODAY!!!
Background
Senator John Thune (R-SD) is offering a dangerous
amendment to the Defense spending bill (S.1390) that would nullify state
efforts to advance gun violence prevention, including efforts to remove
firearms from dangerous domestic violence perpetrators. The Senate will
vote on the Thune Amendment this week and WE must stop it!
Backed by the gun lobby, the Thune Amendment would allow
the carrying of loaded, concealed firearms outside a person's home state, even
by persons legally barred from possessing guns in the state where the carrying
occurs. This legislation would effectively allow the weaker concealed
carry laws of one state to nullify the restrictions on gun carrying of other
states. (For more info, see http://www.bradycampaign.org/action/concealedguns/)
The Thune amendment would endanger victims of domestic
violence and public safety generally, and make it more difficult for law
enforcement to do their jobs. By reducing the gun laws in all states to
the "lowest common denominator" of the states with the weakest laws
on carrying concealed weapons, it would eviscerate state efforts to restrict
those who pose a known harm from carrying hidden, loaded guns--including
domestic violence perpetrators. It allows out of state visitors to carry
concealed firearms even if those visitors have not met the standards for
carrying a concealed weapon in the state they are visiting.
Gun Facts
We know well that firearms too often turn domestic violence
into domestic homicide. A gun is the most common weapon used in domestic
violence cases. According to a 2003 study, access to firearms increases
the risk of intimate partner homicide by more than five times. Another
study in 2003 found that women who were threatened or assaulted with a gun or
other weapon were 20 times more likely than other women to be murdered.
TAKE ACTION NOW!
Call your Senators and urge them to VOTE "NO" to
the gun lobby and the Thune Amendment.
Calling Instructions
Click on the "Take Action" link at the top of
this email, then enter your zip code into the "Call
Now" box. Your Senator's phone number and a telephone script
will appear. Once you have called the first Senator, you will see the
second Senator's contact information. It's easy and quick--and absolutely
essential!
Additional Info: The following editorial ran in the Philadelphia
Daily News yesterday
Opinion: Permit to carry? Scary!
Philadelphia Daily News
July 20, 2009
AS EARLY as this week, Sen. Arlen Specter could set the
wheels in motion for
a new civil war in this country.
That's because a subcommittee on crime and drugs that he
chairs could move
an amendment that will allow pretty much anyone to carry
concealed weapons
pretty much anywhere they want - even to states that might
have prohibited
them in the past.
If you thought, like we did, that allowing people to carry
their loaded
weapons into national parks was bad - Congress gave us this
gift a few
months ago - this amendment (S. 845) will really curl your
hair.
It would allow citizens who have "concealed
carry" permits from the state in
which they reside to carry concealed firearms into another
state that grants
concealed carry permits - even those states whose rules
would have
prohibited those citizens in the past.
Two states don't grant such permits; the rest of the states
have widely
varied rules and regulations that identify who is allowed
to carry hidden
guns. Some states require very little but an application,
but many states
give wide discretion to law enforcement to decide who can
carry around their
hidden guns. This amendment, called the Thune Amendment,
would mean the
weakest concealed carry restrictions would now be the
default.
In Pennsylvania, for example, you can't get such a permit
if you have been
convicted of impersonating a police officer. No such
restrictions exist in
other states like, say, Florida. So Officer Faux can now
get a permit in
Florida, and come to Pennsylvania to terrorize his fellow
citizens with the
gun hidden in his glove compartment or ankle holster.
By forcing most states in the country to open their borders
to anyone
carrying a legally concealed weapon, this law levels the
playing field -
literally and lethally.
This latest outrage from the NRA-controlled Congress is an
egregrious
trampeling of state's rights that should not be allowed to
stand.
More importantly, it's a trampling of the rights of those
of us who don't
care to increase the numbers of people toting around hidden
guns where we
live, and who believe that armed is dangerous - to
everyone.
The pro-gun lobby likes to argue that all such concealed
carry
permit-holders are law-abiding citizens interested only in
upholding the
Constititution. They ought to look at the list of crimes
committed by those
permited to carry a concealed weapon. (www.
bradycampaign.org.)
Those stories include a Florida resident with suspected
links to al Qaeda
who lost his CCW license only after being arrested on
suspicion of a
terrorist plot.
The pro-gun lobby is also fond of claiming that
concealed-weapon permits are
linked to lower crime. This research has long been
dismissed and
discredited.
A note to those poor gun owners who feel so put out by the
inconvenience of
not being able to carry their guns past their own state
borders: If
you're that afraid to travel to other places, stay home.
There's only a short leap from the idea of flooding states
with people
carrying concealed guns to civil war. Especially when you
compare U.S.
casualties in Iraq since the war began - about 3,000 - with
U.S. casualties
from guns in a single year: 30,000.
Those who don't want to be among the casualties for 2009
should call Specter
(202-224-4254 and Sen. Bob Casey (202-224-6324), and urge
them to kill this
The
Universal Precaution/HIV Training has been scheduled! Most folks could
attend August 8, 2009 and the training will begin promptly at 11am. Light
refreshments will be provided. We will be having the training our usual
Agency Meeting spot, Community Benefits Real Estate Office’s Conference
Room at 227 West High Street, and you will enter the building from the rear,
and you may park in the rear lot as well.
Please
RSVP by July 24, 2009 to me. Thank you for all you do!
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM
Executive Director
Survivors, Inc.
Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on the web! http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement
Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault
and strives to create a world in which violence against women and children
is unthinkable.
At some point soon – July or August; Survivors,
Inc. will be offering a Universal Precautions Training to Staff, Volunteers,
and Board Members. Please click the link and use the doodle tool to let us
know your availability. Please provide your response by July 1, 2009.
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
Tomorrow
at 1pm we are having fire safety training at the shelter for all staff, Board
Members, and volunteers with both their Act 33 and 34 Clearances.
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
The
ACRM Tour and Luncheon/Meet and Greet was rescheduled for July 17th
from 10:30am until 1pm. Please RSVP by no later than July 13th so I
can inform the Mission how many folks to anticipate for lunch.
Thank
you for all you do! Please join us and let’s have a good showing for a
supportive community partner!
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM
Executive Director
Survivors, Inc.
Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on the web! http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement
Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault
and strives to create a world in which violence against women and children
is unthinkable.
-----Original Message-----
From: Vickie Corbett [mailto:uwacvolunteers@...]
Sent: Thursday, June 04, 2009 1:21 PM
To: Vickie Corbett
Subject: 6/27 National HIV Testing Day
>>> Please post & distribute as appropriate.
>>>
>>> National HIV Testing Day, June 27, is an annual campaign produced by
>>> the National Association of People with AIDS to encourage
>>> individuals to receive voluntary HIV counseling and testing. HIV
>>> testing and counseling helps people that are HIV-positive receive
>>> the support needed to protect their health and the health of their
>>> partners. It is also a great way for those that are HIV-negative to
>>> get the information needed to remain uninfected.
>>>
>>> Attached is a flyer listing the locations where people can go for
>>> HIV testing. Please post in an appropriate location for all to see.
>>>
>>> Thank you.
>>>
>>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>> Melissa Hughes
>>> Regional Health Educator
>>> Planned Parenthood of Central Pennsylvania
>>> 963 Biglerville Road
>>> Gettysburg, PA 17325
>>> 717-334-8344
>>> Melissa.Hughes@...
>>> www.ppcpa.org <http://www.ppcpa.org/>
>>>
>>>
>>> ____________________________________________________________________
>>> __ This e-mail has been scanned by MCI Managed Email Content
>>> Service, using
>>> Skeptic(tm) technology powered by MessageLabs. For more information
>>> on MCI's Managed Email Content Service, visit http://www.mci.com.
>>> ____________________________________________________________________
>>> __
>>>
>>> CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
>>>
>>> This email may contain confidential health information that is
>>> legally privileged. This information is intended for the use of the
>>> named recipient(s). The authorized recipient of this information is
>>> prohibited from disclosing this information to any party unless
>>> required to do so by law or regulation and is required to destroy
>>> the information after its stated need has been fulfilled. If you
>>> are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any
>>> disclosure, copying, distribution, or action taken in reliance on
>>> the contents of this email is strictly prohibited.
>>> If
>>> you receive this e-mail message in error, please notify the sender
>>> immediately to arrange disposition of the information.
>>>
>>>
>>> ____________________________________________________________________
>>> __ This e-mail has been scanned by MCI Managed Email Content
>>> Service, using
>>> Skeptic(tm) technology powered by MessageLabs. For more information
>>> on MCI's Managed Email Content Service, visit http://www.mci.com.
>>> ____________________________________________________________________
>>> __
>>>
>>
>
Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From: Women's eNews
[mailto:womensenewstoday@...] Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2009 6:10 AM To: Terri@... Subject: Opinion: Beware 'Lone Nut' Theory in Tiller's Murder
Dr. George Tiller's murder in church is part of this country's 30-year
history of antiabortion bombings, arsons and assassinations. For that reason,
Frederick Clarkson doubts the killer acted alone. But proving otherwise may
be impossible.
A podcast of Women's eNews' enormously popular Cheers and Jeers column is
now posted on the Women's eNews Web site: http://www.womensenews.org.
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Here's today's update:
COMMENTARY
Beware 'Lone Nut' Theory in Tiller's
Murder
By Frederick Clarkson
WeNews commentator
Editor's Note: The following is a commentary. The opinions expressed
are those of the author and not necessarily the views of Women's Enews.
(WOMENSENEWS)--It's been more than a decade since I've covered a murder of
an abortion provider.
But I can't say I was surprised by the horrifying news of Dr. George
Tiller's killing this past Sunday, on his way to church.
The threat has been ever present, sometimes quietly, sometimes
dramatically. Abortion providers and abortion rights organizations remember
well how Clayton Waagner spent nine months threatening to shoot clinic
workers and mailing anthrax threats to hundreds of clinics and abortion
rights organizations in 2001-2002.
Now, newsgathering on Tiller's murder is intense and there is much that
can't be known about the circumstances.
But as the coverage unfolds those searching for clear-cut justice at the
end of this ghastly murder shouldn't hold their breath.
Political crimes like the assassination of Tiller are messy affairs.
That has certainly been true in the case of the 30-year history of
antiabortion bombings, arsons and assassinations, some of which, including
the Clayton Waagner capers, I have covered for Women's eNews in the past.
Media coverage of these crimes over the years, has tended to be partial
and not particularly well informed. But times have changed and we are already
experiencing a deluge of mainstream press and blog coverage.
Here are a few things to help sort through the likely frustrations of an
investigation of a political crime in a white hot media environment
Beware the 'Lone Nut' Theory
Few major antiabortion crimes are carried out by lone nuts.
In fact, the known perpetrators have historically been neither nuts nor
alone. The crimes are generally well planned and involve a number of people
who provide varying degrees of support, before and after the fact, witting or
unwitting.
Tiller was the victim of a previous assassination attempt, in which he was
wounded in both arms. His assailant was the then Oregon-based Rachelle
"Shelly" Shannon, a longtime antiabortion militant who had
previously protested at Tiller's clinic and knew the layout.
In the wake of her arrest, the feds dug up from her backyard the first
real evidence of the existence of the underground Army of God, in the form of
the "Army of God Manual," which detailed how to engage in attacks
on clinics and staff.
Shannon had traveled the west in a remarkable crime spree, squirting
butyric acid into clinics (which produces a horrifying, unbearable stench)
and committing a series of arsons. Among her un-indicted co-conspirators was
a couple who provided a safe house on her journeys--as well as gas cans later
used in the arsons.
Prosecutors do not always have enough evidence to prove that such people
are witting participants in the crimes. But this is no surprise. We are
familiar with such underground networks from real and fictional stories of
criminal gangs and covert intelligence operations. People understand that
information is often on a need-to--know basis and often the less one knows,
the better for everyone.
Separate the Crime From Its Politics
Tiller's death will be ruled, legally speaking, as a homicide or murder
and the criminal case that will necessarily be based on a set of forensic
evidence. Such findings may or may not determine whether the suspect, Scott
Roeder, acted alone and why. But premature conclusions that the alleged
shooter acted alone, are just that, premature.
But this was no ordinary high-profile murder.
This one is politically charged and may fairly be called an assassination.
Tiller, after all, has been a prime strategic target of the full range of
the antiabortion movement for a generation. His clinic has been bombed,
burned, vandalized (as recently as early May) in addition to the previous
attempt on Tiller's life. Unsurprisingly, the Army of God is celebrating;
stating at the top of its Web site:
"The lives of innocent babies scheduled to be murdered by George
Tiller are spared by the action of American hero Scott Roeder. George Tiller
the Babykiller reaped what he sowed and is now in eternal hell."
Political statements of pro-choice and antiabortion groups also
demonstrate the political context of this crime.
Pro-choice groups immediately denounced the inflammatory rhetoric against
abortion providers in general and Tiller in particular.
Anti-abortion leaders are worried that the murder will reflect poorly on
their movement.
"George Tiller was a mass murderer and we cannot stop saying
that," Randall Terry, the former head of Operation Rescue told the
Associated Press. Terry said he was now concerned that the Obama
administration "will use Tiller's killing to intimidate pro-lifers into
surrendering our most effective rhetoric and actions."
(Operation Rescue was the premier militant direct action group of the
1980s, conducting massive and often violent protests. It has since fractured
and consists of smaller, but no less dedicated groups around the country.)
Patrick Mahoney of the Christian Defense Coalition told the AP: "I'd
hope they wouldn't try to broad-brush the entire pro-life movement as some
sort of extremist movement because of what happened in Wichita."
Be Alert to Anniversaries
Anniversaries are important to those engaged in long-term revolutionary
struggles including those on the American far right.
Tim McVeigh, for example, blew up the Oklahoma City federal building in
1995 on the anniversary of the federal assault on the Branch Davidian compound
in Waco, Texas.
It may be no coincidence that Tiller's assassination occurred on the sixth
anniversary of the capture of Eric Rudolph who was convicted of pipe bombings
the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, a gay bar, and two abortion clinics.
Rudolph's bombing of the clinic in Birmingham, Ala., resulted in the death
of an off duty police officer and the horrible maiming of a nurse. (The pipe
bombs were packed with nails which functioned as shrapnel.)
This context becomes significant because Roeder, the suspect in Tiller's
killing, was, according to a McClatchey newspapers report, affiliated with
the "Freemen," a far right movement that does not recognize the
legitimacy of the government of the United States and declares themselves
"sovereign citizens." These, in turn, provided the hard core of the
militia movement of the 1990s.
In 1996, Roeder was arrested while driving a car without a license plate
(sovereign citizens don't believe in such things as drivers and marriage
licenses). Officers found bomb making materials in the trunk.
Many of the proponents and practitioners of antiabortion violence, such as
those affiliated with the antiabortion Army of God, have emerged from this
stew of extreme far right movements.
As the legal case against Scott Roeder gets pressed in the days and weeks
ahead, all of this will be in the air; but only so much of it will make its
way into court evidence.
Frederick Clarkson has written about politics and religion for
25 years. He is the author of "Eternal Hostility: the Struggle Between
Theocracy and Democracy;" and most recently, editor of Dispatches from
the Religous Left: the Future of Faith and Politics in America.
Women's eNews welcomes your comments. E-mail us at editors@....
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Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From: Women's eNews
[mailto:womensenewstoday@...] Sent: Friday, May 29, 2009 6:27 AM To: Terri@... Subject: Opinion: Spike in Murder-Suicides Raise 'Manhood' Issue
The horrifying headlines about men who kill their entire families and then
turn the gun on themselves appear to be intensifying. Katherine van Wormer
says the harsh economy may be a factor, but more fundamental may be a
distorted notion of manliness.
Story follows announcements.
A podcast of Women's eNews' enormously popular Cheers and Jeers column is
now posted on the Women's eNews Web site: http://www.womensenews.org.
AOL subscribers: To view the Commentoon by Ann Telnaes and HTML e-mail,
please remember to click on the "Show images and enable links" in
the header of your e-mail.
Does someone send you Women's eNews? Please help us grow and get your own
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Here's today's update:
COMMENTARY
Spike in Murder-Suicides Raise 'Manhood'
Issue
By Katherine van Wormer
WeNews commentator
Editor's Note: The following is a commentary. The opinions expressed
are those of the author and not necessarily the views of Women's Enews.
(WOMENSENEWS)--Consider these recent headlines:
"Teen Escapes as Father Kills Family" (in Florida)
"Maryland Town Anguished, Baffled After Man Kills Wife, Three
Children and Self"
"Four Dead in Baltimore Hotel"
"Police Continue Probe into Murder-Suicide of Wilmington Family"
(California)
"Despondent Dads Driven to Kill Loved Ones" (California,
Washington, Maryland)
Until recently, cases of a parent killing his or her whole family were
extremely rare. According to Kristen Rand, legislative director of the
Washington, D.C.-based think tank Violence Policy Center, these cases
"were so rare we didn't bother to count them as a separate
category."
But 2007 saw several such cases, in which fathers were usually the
killers. In Alabama, one father threw his children off a bridge; in New
Jersey, a man drowned his daughters, then hanged himself; and a California
man shot his wife and two daughters in a parked car before turning the gun on
himself. Over the next two years such mass killings have escalated.
Harsh Economy a Factor
A scan of news reports shows these horrible crimes becoming even more
common, occurring at the rate of one every week or two.
If that rate holds up, the increase is huge. The previous rate was one or
two every three months, according to Rand of the Violence Policy Center.
A doubling in murder-suicide from one or two per day--the average for the
United States--to more than two or three a day is also evident from my news
tracking this year.
Most experts cited in news reports emphasize the correlation between the
killings and the economic downturn. And in our book, "Death by Domestic
Violence: Preventing the Murders and the Murder-Suicides," my co-author
and I did find that unemployment and other financial difficulties were themes
in whole-family murder-suicides.
This fact may help explain why in some places that have been hard hit by
this severe recession--Atlantic City, N.J., and throughout Florida--the
increase in murder-suicides has been particularly acute, as indicated by my
investigation of news sources.
But while the harsh economy may be making things worse, it's not the whole
story behind these grizzly murders.
Looming through all the horror stories is the fact that this is
overwhelmingly a male-on-female crime. The question is why. Why do men who
are in despair and suicidal strike out against the women and children in
their lives?
Dominance, Violence, Jealousy
The research literature, as summarized in our book, shows that the
patterns of murder-suicide of a man and his wife or partner are of two basic
types.
One involves an elderly couple in which the man is the caretaker of a
woman who suffers from dementia. Not wanting to send her to a nursing home
and finding himself too frail to care for her himself, he kills them both.
More commonly, the crimes involve an abusive, extremely possessive man.
When the woman threatens to leave him, he kills her and himself.
Dominance, explosive violence, jealousy and a pathological fear of
rejection by his wife or partner are among the key features of male-on-female
domestic homicide that we found in our research.
Common to every single case that I have studied is a precipitating crisis
and the failure of the man to call out for help.
In two similar cases--one in Iowa City, IA, and one in Baltimore--for
example, men killed their wives, children and then themselves. They took this
action apparently out of a twisted belief that they were all better off dead
and that they, the men, were entitled to "protect" their families
in this way. Both perpetrators were heavily in debt and had trouble pending
at work connected to financial dealings.
Mental Illness Involved?
Psychiatrists interviewed in news stories single out mental illness as the
cause. It's easier to make sense of such cases when we define the
perpetrators as sick, as normal people would not commit such atrocities. And
yet, most of the recent whole-family killings have been committed by men who
were previously high functioning professionals.
Sociologists point to the economic crisis combined with the impact of
suggestions from news coverage of other mass killings.
Access to a gun in the home further increases the likelihood of deadly
violence.
All these factors may be involved. But there are women too who suffer from
mental disorders and who are in economic distress, and yet there are no
reports of any of them wiping out their entire families.
For a holistic understanding of the nature of the plague of
murder-suicides we need to look critically at gender. We must examine this
culture that defines what it means to be a "real man" in our
society and that produces men who react to personal crisis with such
premeditated violence against the women and children in their lives.
Katherine van Wormer, professor of social work at the
University of Northern Iowa, is co-author of "Death by Domestic
Violence: Preventing the Murders and the Murder-Suicides"(Praeger,
2009).
Women's eNews welcomes your comments. E-mail us at editors@....
Note: Women's eNews is not responsible for the content of external
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Please donate now by going to:
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We receive financial support from our readers, private donors, events,
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foundations. * The Bydale Foundation * The Carnegie Corporation of New York *
The Charles Lawrence Keith & Clara S. Miller Foundation * The Ford
Foundation * The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation * The Barbara Lee
Family Foundation * The Livingry Fund of the Tides Foundation * Mary Kay Inc.
* The McCormick Foundation * The Ms. Foundation * The Open Society Institute
* The Rockefeller Brothers Fund * The Rockefeller Family Fund * The Sister
Fund * The Starry Night Fund of Tides Foundation * The United Nations
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Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From: Women's eNews
[mailto:womensenewstoday@...] Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2009 6:11 AM To: Terri@... Subject: Harsh Economy Highlights Cost of Domestic Abuse
As the economy has soured since September, reports of domestic violence
have risen sharply, Kayla Hutzler reports today. Advocates say this trend can
be counted on to worsen household stress. The first of two articles.
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Here's today's update:
SAFETY
Harsh Economy Highlights Cost of Domestic
Abuse
By Kayla Hutzler
WeNews correspondent
(WOMENSENEWS)--The economic crisis is not
only causing a rise in the unemployment rates, it is also causing a rise in
domestic violence incidents.
Seventy-five percent of domestic violence shelters in the United States
reported an increase in women seeking help since September and 73 percent of
these shelters attribute this rise to financial issues. The April report,
which surveyed 600 domestic violence shelters across the country, was
released by the Mary Kay Ash Charitable Foundation, based in Texas and
Ontario. The Foundation is dedicated to ending women's cancers and domestic
violence around the world.
The National Domestic Violence Hotline measured an increase in calls of 21
percent during the third quarter of 2008, as reported in a press release by
the organization.
A Volatile Mix
In response, the hotline, which is based in Texas, conducted a survey of
7,678 callers. The survey consisted of two questions: "Has there been a
change in your household financial situation in the last year?" to which
54 percent answered yes; and "Do you believe the
abuse behavior has increased in the past year?" to which 64 percent
answered yes (based on a study released January 29).
"The increase in requests for services is connected to the economic
crisis in a number of ways," said Rita Smith, executive director of the
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, based in Denver. "Most
importantly, domestic violence is a crime of access. Since a significant
number of people have lost their jobs in the last six months that means more
people are at home together for long periods of time. Money has always been
an issue that causes stress between couples and in families.
In addition to that factor, the abuse and violence are already part of the
control tactics that batterers use, and this makes the mix extremely
volatile."
Economic Abuse a Factor
Domestic violence is not only a response to household financial stress,
it's also a major contributor to it.
When abuse takes a financial form it can cause more long-term harm than
physical or sexual abuse, says Smith.
"Economic abuse is one of the more effective ways that abusers
control their victims. They will either control all the money in the family,
making her account for every dime she spends and giving her the allowance he
believes she needs. Even if she works, she has to show him the pay stubs and
he controls all the money," she said.
Another way that economic abuse can play out, says Smith, is when the
abuser puts everything they own in the victim's name. At first that may seem
great, she says, but if the woman leaves he will stop paying all the bills
and ruin her financially. He can prevent her from getting credit, a new home
and sometimes other work due to problems with all the defaults on her credit
history.
Kayla Hutzler, a journalism major at Manhattan College, is an
editorial intern with Women's eNews.
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Women's eNews is a nonprofit independent news service
covering issues of concern to women and their allies. Women's eNews is
supported by our readers; reprints and licensing fees; and foundations. Who
Funds Us
We receive financial support from our readers, private donors, events,
commercial publications that republish our material and from the following
foundations. * The Bydale Foundation * The Carnegie Corporation of New York *
The Charles Lawrence Keith & Clara S. Miller Foundation * The Ford
Foundation * The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation * The Barbara Lee
Family Foundation * The Livingry Fund of the Tides Foundation * Mary Kay Inc.
* The McCormick Foundation * The Ms. Foundation * The Open Society Institute
* The Rockefeller Brothers Fund * The Rockefeller Family Fund * The Sister
Fund * The Starry Night Fund of Tides Foundation * The United Nations
Foundation * The Waitt Institute for Violence Prevention * The W.K. Kellogg
Foundation * Working Assets The donations from readers are critical to our
success. They are an important measure that we are serving our audience--the
yardstick that our foundation supporters will measure us by. Donate now by
going to http://www.womensenews.org/support.cfm
Women's eNews subscribers may select whether to receive a
daily full text, daily summary or weekly summary. To change your email
address, send mail to membersvcs@.... To change the frequency of
your mail or to cancel your subscription, send a message to Member Services
(membersvcs@...) or use our online form:
http://www.womensenews.org/update_subscription.cfm
Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From: Family Violence
Prevention Fund [mailto:SpeakingUp@...] Sent: Friday, May 08, 2009 5:06 PM To: dawn@... Subject: FVPF's Speaking Up Volume 15, Issue 6
May
8, 2009 Vol. 15, Issue 6
Speaking
Up is a project of the Family Violence Prevention Fund. Produced by PR
Solutions, Inc., Washington, DC. Phone: 202/371 1999; Fax: 202/371 9142;
E-mail: speakingup@....
AN EMERGING ISSUE
In Vermont and
Nebraska, lawmakers are considering measures that would disallow felony
prosecutions. In Pennsylvania, a federal judge issued a restraining order
to stop a zealous prosecutor from filing criminal charges. But in
jurisdictions around the country, teens are being prosecuted for child
pornography.
It’s all because
of sexting – a relatively new phenomenon made possible by ubiquitous new
technologies that allow teenagers to send nude or semi-nude photos, usually
of themselves, to someone else’s cell phone.
Most often, a
teenage girl sends these photos to a boyfriend, intended only for him. But
what happens if her boyfriend forwards it widely – right away, or perhaps
later after an ugly break-up? And what if the photo was coerced, or taken
by a third party of a teen who was incapacitated by alcohol or drugs? Then
what is the appropriate response from the criminal justice system,
lawmakers, educators, parents and communities?
Many are
struggling to figure that out, and to create laws, rules and guidelines
that will protect victims and punish offenders without creating criminal
records for teenagers who make mistakes but don’t intend to cause serious
harm.
Sexting is a
highly emotional issue. Few want young people who make mistakes to be
labeled child pornographers or sex offenders for life. But many prosecutors
are determined to take a strong stand in order to stop this practice, even
if it means prosecuting a teenage girl who sends a semi-nude picture to her
boyfriend, or the boyfriend who forwards it to one friend. It’s easy to
understand why; at least one mother attributes her daughter’s suicide to
the trauma caused by her former boyfriend forwarding a photo she intended
only for him (to read more about that case, please click here).
Domestic and
sexual violence experts are being asked about sexting more and more. What
is the appropriate response? What kinds of prevention can prevent this
practice? What kinds of policies should schools and school systems adopt?
What should parents be telling teens?
The
Facts
A recent survey from the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned
Pregnancy and CosmoGirl.com found that one in five teen girls – and one in
ten younger teen girls (age 13 to 16) – say they have electronically sent
or posted nude or semi-nude photos or videos of themselves.
Even more teen
girls, 37 percent, say they have sent or posted sexually suggestive texts,
emails or Instant Messages.
That same survey
found that more than half of teen girls (51 percent) say pressure from a
guy is a reason girls send sexy messages or images, while only 18 percent
of teen boys say pressure from a girl is a reason. Twelve percent of teen
girls who have sent sexually suggestive messages or images say they felt
“pressured” to do so.
The
Response Today
Many experts are concluding that existing laws are inadequate, and damaging
over-reactions are occurring. The result, right now, is a confusing mix of threats,
prosecutions, rules, and guidelines that may vary from jurisdiction to
jurisdiction and even case to case.
After school
officials in Pennsylvania’s Tunkhannock Area School District found
semi-nude pictures of students on other students’ cell phones in March,
they turned them over to the district attorney who concluded that they were
“provocative” and “illegal.” Investigators identified the students
involved, who had been caught with these photos on their cell phones.
Investigators
considered charging the teens with sexual abuse of a minor, but instead
offered a deal that required them to take a ten-hour class addressing
pornography and sexual violence. Seventeen students (13 girls and four
boys) accepted the deal in February. If convicted of the charges, they
could have faced time in prison and likely would have had to register as
sex offenders.
But three
teenage girls and their parents refused the deal. MaryJo Miller, the mother
of one of them, said the photos were harmless. She said the photo had been
taken two years earlier at a slumber party and showed the girls from the
waist up, both were wearing bras.
Feeling that
charges would be unfair and illegal, the three families filed a lawsuit
against Wyoming County District Attorney George P. Skumanick. The American
Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania filed the lawsuit on their behalf. It
argues that by threatening to prosecute the girls for being in photos
Skumanick considered “provocative” he was violating their constitutional
rights, the New York Times reports.
Then a federal
judge stepped in, granting a temporary restraining order which prevents the
district attorney from filing criminal charges.
But prosecutions
are proceeding in other jurisdictions.
State
Legislators Act
This month, the Vermont Senate passed legislation that would remove the
most serious legal consequences – child pornography charges with harsh
sentences – for teenagers ages 13 to 18 who engage in sexting. The bill
would exempt from child pornography prosecutions cases where a teenager who
either sends or receives sexting messages voluntarily transmits the image.
The legislation is pending in the state House.
The legislation
does not address instances in which a teen shows graphic images on his or
her cell phone screen to a group of friends, or leaves a clip on a computer
where it could be found by someone else – without transmitting it.
The law has
sparked comment from all across the country. The Burlington Free Press
editorialized that, “There must be strong evidence that the images were
sent voluntarily. A lack of sufficient evidence to prove explicit coercion
is insufficient because of the inherent power difference between a
13-year-old and an 18-year-old…We all know the incredible peer pressure
that rules teenage society. In such an environment, determining whether an
act was consensual or coerced might be nearly impossible in many
instances.”
The Nebraska
state legislature is considering a bill (LB97) that would bar registered
sex offenders from using social networking sites and would increase
penalties for some child pornography offenses, but exempts teens from
sexting charges, the Lincoln Journal Star reports.
That bill would
create an exception for teens who knowingly send nude pictures of
themselves to another minor, and for those under age 19 who receive a
picture from someone who is at least 15 and who does not then forward the
image. Though sending nude pictures would be against the law, Nebraska is
trying to craft a law that does not trap teen sexters but instead addresses
more serious child pornography allegations, proponents say.
Other states are
expected to act this year or next.
Appropriate
Response
“ We advocate a common sense approach to sexting that recognizes that
teenagers don’t always exercise the best judgment – but that also makes a
distinction between mischief and poor judgment, on the one hand, and malice
that causes real harm on the other,” said Family Violence Prevention Fund
President Esta Soler. “Laws need to recognize the difference between a girl
sending a private photo to her boyfriend or a boyfriend receiving that
photo, and a boy taking and distributing a picture of a girl who’s been
compromised by a date rape drug at a party. And police and prosecutors need
to exercise sound judgment when enforcing those laws.”
Soler notes that
the domestic violence field has seen cases of well-intentioned laws and
over-zealous prosecution that caused more harm than good. Disastrous laws
designed to protect children who witness domestic violence ended up ripping
them away from their nonviolent mothers. Laws designed to protect battered
women by requiring doctors to tell police if they suspected domestic
violence ended up preventing women from getting medical care for serious injuries.
And laws designed to cause more batterers to be arrested ended up causing
more victims to be arrested.
“Above all, we
should remember that the vast majority of prosecutions represent a failure
to prevent,” Soler continued. “That’s why our primary focus is on helping
teenagers connect the dots so they will recognize what is and isn’t okay.
Teenagers are, by definition, still developing, still testing boundaries,
still figuring out their lives. If we rely too heavily on the kinds of
black/white solutions the criminal justice system offers, we will sacrifice
too many of them to their mistakes rather than protecting
them from their mistakes.”
The Family
Violence Prevention Fund’s That’s
Not Coolcampaign, created in partnership with the Advertising
Council and the Department of Justice’s Office on Violence Against Women,
is designed to start a conversation among teens about how controlling
behavior and harassment from a boyfriend or girlfriend, online or via cell
phone, can turn into abuse. Learn more at www.thatsnotcool.com.
To read more about the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned
Pregnancy’s survey, click here.
******************** PREVENTING VIOLENCE CAN REDUCE HEALTH CARE COSTS
The American
Medical Association’s (AMA’s) National Advisory Council on Violence and
Abuse convened violence prevention and health experts on April 16 to brief
congressional staff about how victims exposed to violence and abuse access
health care more frequently and at a greater cost than those without that
history. Experts said that physical, sexual and psychological violence can
have a significant impact on victims’ long-term health, and that effective
intervention and prevention strategies can decrease the health care costs
associated with the short- and long-term consequences of abuse paid by
private and public insurers.
Studies show that women who have experienced domestic violence are 80 percent
more likely to have a stroke, 70 percent more likely to have heart disease,
60 percent more likely to have asthma and 70 percent more likely to drink
heavily than women who have not experienced intimate partner violence.
Children who experience childhood trauma, including witnessing incidents of
domestic violence, are at a greater risk of having serious adult health
problems including tobacco use, substance abuse, obesity, cancer, heart
disease, depression and a higher risk for unintended pregnancy.
The briefing
featured: Phaedra Corso, Ph.D., University of Georgia; David Corwin, M.D.,
AMA’s National Advisory Council on Violence and Abuse Chair; W. Rodney
Hammond, Ph.D., Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Connie
Mitchell, California Medical Association and University of California,
Davis; and Kiersten Stewart, Family Violence Prevention Fund (FVPF).
“Dating,
domestic and sexual violence and child abuse are health care problems of
epidemic proportions in this country,” FVPF Public Policy Director Stewart
said. “Violence has immediate health consequences through injury, but it
also can cause life-threatening conditions that affect survivors and
witnesses throughout their lives.”
“Every year,
millions of Americans are exposed to violence and abuse as victims,
witnesses and even perpetrators, and these experiences lead to dramatically
high costs to our health care system,” AMA National Advisory Council on
Violence and Abuse Chair David Corwin, M.D., said. “The long-term costs of
this violence are less obvious, but they are an even greater public health
concern.” Corwin moderated the briefing.
It was sponsored
by: FVPF, AMA National Advisory Council on Violence and Abuse, Academy on
Violence and Abuse, American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, American
Academy of Pediatrics, American Psychiatric Association, and Nursing
Network on Violence Against Women. Representatives Rosa DeLauro (D-CT),
Mark Kirk (R-IL), Lois Capps (D-CA), John J. Duncan, Jr. (R-TN), Lucille
Roybal-Allard (D-CA) and James Moran (D-VA) and Senators Mike Crapo (R-ID)
and Patrick Leahy (D-VT) were honorary co-chairs.
The Academy on
Violence and Abuse recently released a white paper, Hidden Costs in
Health Care, The Economic Impact of Violence and Abuse, which was
available at the briefing. It provides an overview of the research in this
area and finds that expenses related to violence and abuse may cost the
health care system hundreds of billions of dollars each year. The full
white paper is available at http://avahealth.org.
The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention reports 1,200 deaths and two million
injuries to women from intimate partner violence each year. On average,
three women are murdered by their husbands or boyfriends each day in this
country. 15.5 million U.S. children live in families in which partner
violence occurred at least once in the past year, and seven million
children live in families in which severe partner violence occurred.
“As health care
reform advances, violence prevention needs to be an integral part of the
discussion,” Stewart added. “As we heard here today, violence prevention
can play a key role in reducing health care costs. In the current economic
climate, saving valuable health care dollars is essential.”
******************** NEARLY HALF OF STATES FAIL TO PROTECT TEEN DATING VIOLENCE
VICTIMS
For the second
year in a row, Break the Cycle graded each state on its ability to protect
victims of teen dating violence who seek protection orders against their
abusers. This year, Break the Cycle gave only five states grades of “A” and
14 states grades of “B.” The five “A” states are: California, Illinois,
Minnesota, New Hampshire and Oklahoma.
Just nine states
(California, Connecticut, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Oregon, Utah,
Washington and Wyoming) allow minors to obtain protection or restraining
orders without the involvement of a parent, guardian or other adult if they
meet certain requirements, like age or relationship to abuser.
Ten states
received an automatic failure because they do not specifically recognize
dating relationships as valid domestic relationships for obtaining
restraining orders or protection orders, and do not make restraining orders
available to minors. Those ten states are: Alabama, Arizona, Georgia,
Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and
Virginia.
For this year’s
report, Break the Cycle refined its scoring system in order to better
assess the way that state civil domestic violence protection order laws
address the needs of teen victims. Eight states improved their grades:
Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Mississippi, Minnesota and
Wisconsin. Four of them were states that received “F” grades last year:
Iowa improved to a “D”; Maryland and New York to a “C”; and Wisconsin to a
“B”.
“With several
states changing their laws to better protect teens since 2008, we have
already seen that these grades spur action among state legislatures
throughout the country, as well as activism among our nation’s youth,” said
Break the Cycle Executive Director Marjorie Gilberg.
Victims of teen
dating abuse face overwhelming obstacles to getting help because, as
minors, it is often difficult for them to move from their home, change
their school or gain access to basic securities like money, shelter and
transportation.
Send a special e-card
and Give RESPECT! this Mother’s Day in honor of all the women in your life.
You can also make a donation or give the $5 RESPECT! bracelet at www.GiveRespect.org
to show your support. The bracelet is sold at Macy’s and macys.com and half
the proceeds benefit the Family Violence Prevention Fund.
Also featured on
GiveRespect.org are valuable resources and tools to equip parents, coaches,
teachers and mentors with ways to get involved and tips and information on
how to talk to young people about healthy relationships. GiveRespect.org
resource materials were developed in conjunction with the Family Violence
Prevention Fund’s esteemed advisors: psychology and relationship experts
Dr. Janet Taylor and Dr. Gail Saltz, and researchers Dr. Jay Silverman of
the Harvard School of Public Health and Dr. Elizabeth Miller from UC Davis
Medical Center.
The RESPECT!
Campaign is an awareness and action campaign created by the Family Violence
Prevention Fund with founding national partner, Macy’s. It uses a positive
approach to engage parents on the importance of teaching young people about
healthy relationships early and often. Visit www.GiveRespect.org
today!
******************** GROWING UP IN POVERTY CAN AFFECT A CHILD’S BRAIN
A new study, one
of the first to look at cognitive responses to physiological stress, finds
that chronic stress from growing up in poverty can affect a child’s brain
and diminish a child’s ability to develop language, reading and
problem-solving skills.
Researchers
rated stress levels using an “allostatic load” scale – measurements of
levels of the stress hormones cortisol, epinephrine and norepinephrine,
blood pressure and body mass index – and tested children at ages nine, 13
and 17. They also measured working memory at age 17. They found that, the
longer children lived in poverty, the higher their allostatic load and the
lower their working memory. Children who spent their entire childhoods in
poverty scored about 20 percent lower on working memory tests than children
who were never poor.
“When you are
poor, when it rains it pours” the study’s author and Cornell University
professor Gary W. Evans told the Cornell Chronicle. “You may have
housing problems. You may have more conflict in the family. There’s a lot
more pressure in paying the bills. You’ll probably end up moving more
often. We know that produces stress in families, including on the
children.”
The study’s
authors suggest that government policies and programs aiming to reduce the
income-performance gap should consider the stress children experience at
home.
“Other
researchers cautioned that more work is needed to explore and confirm the
findings, and that chronic stress is probably one of the many factors
affecting a child’s development,” the Washington Post reports.
“But they said the results provided insight into the connections between
poverty and achievement.”
“Childhood
Poverty, Chronic Stress, and Adult Working Memory” is published online in
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Read the
complete study here.
******************** NIKE FOUNDATION SUPPORTS SOCIAL NORMS CHANGE
On March 30, the
Nike Foundation joined more than 450 leaders at a symposium in Brazil to
explore research and best practices by international programs that
challenge gender norms, engage men and boys in reducing violence against
women and girls, promote sexual and reproductive health, prevent and treat
HIV/AIDS, and support fatherhood and caregiving. At the first-ever
symposium, the Nike Foundation announced that, with the support and
collaboration of the NoVo Foundation, it has made grants to programs directed
at men and boys that help shift harmful gender norms that impede progress
in educational achievement, sexual and reproductive health, and economic
prospects.
The Nike
Foundation awarded $1.6 million to the Family Violence Prevention Fund
(FVPF) for work in India with the International Center on Research on
Women. The program, modeled after the FVPF’s Coaching Boys Into Men
campaign, is designed to engage well-known cricket coaches and players to
educate boys about treating girls with respect and understanding that
violence is wrong.
The Nike
Foundation also awarded grants to PATH for its work in China and Kenya,
Tostan for its work in Senegal, and Instituto Promundo for its work in
Brazil and India.
“Our investment
in FVPF expands on an approach that has already demonstrated effectiveness
in other countries,” said Nike Foundation Managing Director Lisa MacCallum.
“We are excited to be supporting customization and delivery of this vital
program on the cricket field.”
“This grant is a
wonderful opportunity to build on the success of our Coaching Boys Into
Men program, which is successfully transforming harmful attitudes
about women and girls,” FVPF President Esta Soler said. “Because of its
immense popularity and large formal and informal networks, cricket provided
the ideal dissemination vehicle. And, when these messages come from
respected coaches and players, men and boys listen.”
******************** NEW RESOURCE
The Family
Violence Prevention Fund, National Resource Center on Domestic Violence and
Greater Hartford Legal Aid have just released a new guide to improve
outreach and responses to domestic violence victims who are in contact with
their partners or children’s fathers. This new resource addresses how to
identify safety strategies, find resources and to know what to say when a
victim’s focus and goals are to remain in contact, remain in the
relationship or to improve their children’s relationship with their father.
It also recommends what kinds of new partnerships need to be developed to
benefit these women and children, how to talk to women and children about
what helps men change, and organizational opportunities and challenges to
become more relevant in communities. To download the new guide click here.
******************** IN THE NEWS
MILITARY – Reports of sexual assault in the military rose
nine percent over last year, but only a small number of cases went to
military courts or were referred for non-judicial punishment. In about 20
percent of cases (643 of the 2,923 reported), the victim sought care or
made a report but refused to provide all the information necessary to
pursue an investigation. The Associated Press reports that, “The
Defense Department allows those limited reports on the theory that it
encourages victims to at least seek care when they might otherwise keep
silent.”
NATIONAL – In late April, the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) announced that it will approve the sale of Plan B, emergency
contraception, over-the-counter to 17-year-olds. Plan B is highly effective
at preventing pregnancy and is most commonly used by rape victims and women
who want to avoid pregnancy after having unprotected sex. For years, many
violence prevention and reproductive rights advocates have urged the
federal government to make it available without a doctor’s prescription;
some accused the FDA of putting politics ahead of science when it refused
to do so during the Bush Administration, the Washington Post
reports.
FL – The Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence
found a 37 percent increase in the demand for emergency shelter services
from August to December 2008, the Pensacola News Journal reports.
Florida advocates cautioned that domestic violence occurs when the economy
is good or bad, but said the economic downturn is taking a toll.
MA – State legislators honored the
Bridgewater-Raynham public school district for its work with high schools
to provide skill groups and peer and adult mentoring programs to help
students build safe and supportive relationships, the Raynham Call
reports. Bridgewater-Raynham was one of 30 schools and districts that
received funding through the innovative Safe and Supportive Learning
Environments program. Each grantee program addresses the educational and
psycho-social needs of children who witnessed violence and had other
adverse experiences. The Bridgewater-Raynham program has been extended to
middle school to better prepare eighth grade students making the transition
to high school.
NC – A gunman entered a Carthage nursing home and
opened fire in March, killing seven elderly residents of the home and one
nurse. Robert K. Stewart was wounded by Carthage police and taken into
custody. Officials believe that Stewart may have targeted the nursing home
because his estranged wife, Wanda Luck, was on duty when the shootings
occurred. However, she was in a locked ward for Alzheimer’s patients and
not hurt, the Raleigh News & Observer reports. Several members
of Luck’s family told reporters that Stewart drank heavily and was prone to
violent rages.
AFGHANISTAN – President Hamid Karzai said the Afghan
government will change a law that critics say legalizes rape within
marriage. A review of the law, which has been the subject of broad
international criticism because it introduces Taliban-era restrictions on
women and sanctions marital rape, was ordered last month. President Karzai
told activists last month that he had not read the legislation when he
signed it, Reuters reports. President Obama and many U.S.
lawmakers have been among the critics. Three hundred Afghan women walked
through the streets of the capital to protest the new law, and then
delivered a petition calling for its repeal. The law was crafted to affect
only the Shi’ite Muslim community, 15 percent of Afghanistan’s population.
Critics have accused Karzai of signing the legislation in haste because he
faces re-election this summer and wants to curry favor with Shi’ite voters.
INDIA – An article on the Lancet’s web site
finds that more than 100,000 young women age 15 to 34 were killed in fires
in 2001. Researchers believe that kitchen accidents, self-immolation and
homicides related to different forms of domestic violence – including bride
burnings and dowry deaths – are the main reasons that young women are dying
in fires. The article said, “Fire-related injuries are an important public
health problem in India, and need urgent attention.” The number of young
women killed is six times higher than the number reported to police.
******************** IN THEIR OWN WORDS
“Afghan
President Hamid Karzai has just signed a law that forces women to obey
their husbands’ sexual demands, keeps women from leaving the house – even
for work or school – without a husband’s permission, automatically grants
child custody rights to fathers and grandfathers before mothers, and favors
men in inheritance disputes and other legal matters. In short, the law
again consigns Afghan women to lives of brutal repression… The ugly truth in
Afghanistan is that it has long been sliding back into the violent chaos
that is friendly political ground for the Taliban and other extremist
groups. Women have, as usual, been among the chief victims. There is indeed
a lengthy and urgent to-do list for the Obama administration, which says it
is determined to abandon a failing course. But that does not mean the
United States should again fail Afghanistan’s women.”
-- Marie Cocco, “Silence Meets Despair of Afghan Women,” Denver Post,
April 3, 2009
“Sexual assault
scars the lives of millions in the United States. To increase awareness
about this issue, prevent future crimes, and aid victims, this month we
mark National Sexual Assault Awareness Month… To make continued progress,
my Administration supports efforts to help Americans better understand this
issue. Working together, we can reduce the incidence of sexual assault and
help all who have experienced this heinous crime… I urge all Americans to
respond to sexual assault by creating policies at work and school, by
engaging in discussions with family and friends, and by making the
prevention of sexual assault a priority in their communities.”
--United States President Barack Obama, National Sexual Assault
Awareness Month 2009 Proclamation, April 8, 2009
******************** SAVE THE DATE
May
12-15, 2009, Minneapolis, MN International Conference for Batterer Intervention Program
Professionals
The Domestic Abuse Project in Minneapolis will host the Bridging
Perspectives Conference 2009. Building on the successful Michigan
conference of 2005, the Bridging Perspectives Conference 2009 will
bring together nearly 600 people interested in working with men who use
violence in their familial relationships with women and children. It will
offer a chance to simultaneously explore multiple issues in the field of
batterers’ intervention, such as accountability, culturally specific
approaches, new and emerging research, fathering and battering,
interdisciplinary cooperation, chemical dependency, mental health issues
and more. For more information, visit www.bridgingperspectives.org/.
May
21-22, 2009, New York, NY Stand Up and Speak Out
A Call to Men, a national association of men and women committed to ending
violence against women, will host its fourth national conference at John
Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. At Stand Up and Speak Out,
women and men will come together and strategize about how best to end
violence against women – with a solution that engages men in addressing the
issue. For more information, visit www.acalltomen.org
or email conferences@....
May
27-29, 2009, Washington, DC National Child Welfare Evaluation Summit
The Children’s Bureau will host a National Child Welfare Evaluation
Summit at the Renaissance Mayflower Hotel for Children’s Bureau
discretionary grant evaluators, state and Tribal child welfare administrators
and analysts, evaluation experts in child welfare and other human service
fields, and other interested professionals. The Summit will explore the
state of evaluation practice in the field of child welfare and promote
cohesive, strategic and sound approaches for evaluating child welfare
systems, programs and projects. For more information, email evaluationsummit@....
May
27-30, 2009, New Orleans, LA Children, Courts and Custody: Back to the Future or Full Steam Ahead?
The Association of Family and Conciliation Courts 46th annual conference
will be held at the Sheraton New Orleans and will examine how family law
research, practices and processes have evolved. It will feature 70 workshops,
including three-hour advanced sessions, three plenary sessions and a choice
of six daylong pre-conference institutes. Sessions will address challenges
to conventional child custody wisdom including assertions about 50/50
parenting, the child’s role in the process, the resiliency of children
after divorce, the changing role of court systems in resolving family
disputes, and more. For more information, visit www.afccnet.org.
June
2-4, 2009, Jackson Hole, WY The Next National Summit: Exploring Effective Interventions in Domestic
Violence and Child Maltreatment
The Family Violence Prevention Fund and the National Council of Juvenile
and Family Court Judges, in partnership with the U.S. Department of
Justice, Office on Violence Against Women, will host this Summit on the
intersection of domestic violence and child welfare. Professionals working
on issues related to co-occurrence will share strategies for transforming
the way child welfare agencies, domestic violence organizations, courts,
other service providers, and communities respond to families in need. For
more information, call 216/707-9499 or visit http://endabuse.org/content/features/detail/1081/.
August
3-4, 2009, Long Beach, CA A Journey to Healing: Finding the Path
Organized by the Institute on Domestic Violence in the African American
Community, this conference will offer informative and engaging
presentations, practical information, interactive sessions and artistic
expressions focused on learning how to help battered women and those who
witnessed domestic violence as children. Featured speakers will include:
Brenda L. Thomas, author of Laying Down My Burdens; Carolyn West,
Ph.D., a scholar specializing in violence in the lives of black women; and
Mildred Muhammad, former wife of the ‘DC Sniper’ John Allen Muhammad. For
more information, visit www.idvaac.org/healing/.
September 3-4, 2009, San Diego, CA A New Direction for a Safer Tomorrow: A National Conference on
Supervised Visitation and Safe Exchange
The National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges and the Office on
Violence Against Women will host a conference to inform professionals about
how to provide safe, supervised visitation and exchange services that take
domestic violence into account at the Omni San Diego Hotel. National
experts will discuss safety for adult victims and children; services for
diverse populations; community collaboration; and advocacy. For more
information, contact Michele Robinson at 775/784-6427 or mrobinson@....
November
6-7, 2009, Collegeville, MN First National Conference for Campus-Based Men’s Gender Equality &
Anti-Violence Groups
This conference will be the first chance for male students from across the
country to explore how to find positive ways to reach campus men with
messages against dating and other forms of men’s violence, and for gender
equality. It will provide opportunities to discuss how to deal with
backlash and hostility, and how to work in partnership with women’s groups.
St. John’s University will host the conference. For more details, email
gkellom@....
******************** RENEW YOUR SUPPORT FOR SPEAKING UP TODAY!
Speaking Up relies on the financial support of its readers
through membership fees and generous sponsorships. A sponsor-level
contribution of $100 or more will help distribute Speaking Up to
individuals and organizations in financial need. A regular subscription
requires an annual membership fee of just $35.
Continue to
support Speaking Up’s work to strengthen the voice of the domestic
and sexual violence communities. Renew your support for Speaking Up
today! Please fill out this form and mail it, along with your payment, to Speaking
Up Renewal, the Family Violence Prevention Fund, 383 Rhode Island St.,
Suite #304, San Francisco, CA 94103.
YES! I WANT TO RENEW MY SUPPORT FOR SPEAKING UP
Contact Information:
(Please print clearly and fill out all fields)
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Speaking Up. It will come to you in an HTML format that is
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membership contribution:
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Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
From: Family Violence
Prevention Fund [mailto:info@...] Sent: Friday, May 08, 2009 7:07 PM To: Terri Hamrick Kessel Subject: NewsFlash - May 8, 2009
In Vermont and Nebraska, lawmakers are
considering measures that would disallow felony prosecutions. In
Pennsylvania, a federal judge issued a restraining order to stop a zealous
prosecutor from filing criminal charges. But in jurisdictions around the
country, teens are being prosecuted for child pornography. It’s all because
of sexting – a relatively new phenomenon made possible by ubiquitous new
technologies that allow teenagers to send nude or semi-nude photos, usually
of themselves, to someone else’s cell phone. Read more...
The American Medical Association’s
National Advisory Council on Violence and Abuse convened violence
prevention and health experts on April 16 to brief congressional staff
about how victims exposed to violence and abuse access health care more
frequently and at a greater cost than those without that history. Experts
said that physical, sexual and psychological violence can have a
significant impact on victims’ long-term health, and that effective
intervention and prevention strategies can decrease the health care costs
associated with the short- and long-term consequences of abuse paid by
private and public insurers. Read more...
For the second year in a row, Break the
Cycle graded each state on its ability to protect victims of teen dating
violence who seek protection orders against their abusers. This year, Break
the Cycle gave only five states grades of “A” and 14 states grades of “B.”
The five “A” states are: California, Illinois, Minnesota, New Hampshire and
Oklahoma. Read
more...
Send a special e-card and Give RESPECT!
this Mother’s Day in honor of all the women in your life. You can also make a donation or give
the $5
RESPECT! bracelet at www.GiveRespect.org to show your support. The
bracelet is sold at Macy’s and macys.com and half the proceeds benefit the
Family Violence Prevention Fund. Read more...
A new study, one of the first to look at
cognitive responses to physiological stress, finds that chronic stress from
growing up in poverty can affect a child’s brain and diminish a child’s
ability to develop language, reading and problem-solving skills. Read more...
On March 30, the Nike Foundation joined
more than 450 leaders at a symposium in Brazil to explore research and best
practices by international programs that challenge gender norms, engage men
and boys in reducing violence against women and girls, promote sexual and
reproductive health, prevent and treat HIV/AIDS, and support fatherhood and
caregiving. At the first-ever symposium, the Nike Foundation announced
that, with the support and collaboration of the NoVo Foundation, it has
made grants to programs directed at men and boys that help shift harmful
gender norms that impede progress in educational achievement, sexual and
reproductive health, and economic prospects. Read more...
The Family Violence Prevention Fund,
National Resource Center on Domestic Violence and Greater Hartford Legal
Aid have just released a new guide to improve outreach and responses to
domestic violence victims who are in contact with their partners or
children’s fathers. Read
more...
MILITARY – Reports of sexual assault in the military rose
nine percent over last year, but only a small number of cases went to
military courts or were referred for non-judicial punishment. In about 20
percent of cases (643 of the 2,923 reported), the victim sought care or
made a report but refused to provide all the information necessary to
pursue an investigation. Read more...
“Afghan President Hamid Karzai has just
signed a law that forces women to obey their husbands’ sexual demands,
keeps women from leaving the house – even for work or school – without a
husband’s permission, automatically grants child custody rights to fathers
and grandfathers before mothers, and favors men in inheritance disputes and
other legal matters. In short, the law again consigns Afghan women to lives
of brutal repression. Read
more...
May
12-15, 2009, Minneapolis, MN Bridging Perspectives
Conference 2009
The Domestic Abuse Project in Minneapolis will host the Bridging Perspectives Conference
2009. Building on the successful Michigan conference of 2005,
the Bridging
Perspectives Conference 2009 will bring together nearly 600
people interested in working with men who use violence in their familial
relationships with women and children. It will offer a chance to
simultaneously explore multiple issues in the field of batterers’
intervention, such as accountability, culturally specific approaches, new
and emerging research, fathering and battering, interdisciplinary
cooperation, chemical dependency, mental health issues and more. Read more...
If you no longer wish to receive
e-mail from us, please click here.
Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
Research
on perceived peer attitudes and how it impacts male bystanders' action
Personal and Perceived Peer Attitudes
Supporting Sexual Aggression as Predictors of Male College Students' Willingness
to Intervene Against Sexual Aggression.
Brown AL, Messman-Moore TL. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2009; ePublished
April 28, 2009.
Affiliation: University at Buffalo.
DOI: 10.1177/0886260509334400 http://jiv.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/0886260509334400v1
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM
Executive Director
Survivors, Inc.
Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on the web! http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement
Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault
and strives to create a world in which violence against women and children
is unthinkable.
-----Original Message-----
From: Storm, Jennifer [mailto:JStorm@...]
Sent: Monday, May 11, 2009 1:28 PM
Subject: Recent Blog
I thought this may be of interest to some....
Jennifer Storm
Executive Director
Victim/Witness Assistance Program
Dauphin County Courthouse
Front & Market Streets
Harrisburg, PA 17101
1-888-292-9611
717-780-7078
Pager/Cell 717-805-0222
www.victimwitness.org
jstorm@...
The Victim/Witness Assistance Program (VWAP) is a private, non-profit
organization dedicated to serving victims of crimes. Our mission is to
reduce the trauma of a crime by empowering and assisting clients (crime
victims, witnesses and significant others) in reconstructing their lives
through advocacy, support, information, and referrals. VWAP strives to
prevent further victimization by intervening on behalf of our clients to
address any problems created by their involvement in the justice system.
JOIN US FOR OUR GALA ON TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 29th at THE WHITAKER CENTER Your
own safety is at stake when your neighbor's wall is ablaze. ~Horace
-
Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
Free Monthly Training
Sessions offered by
Dauphin County Department
of
Drug & Alcohol Services
Institute for
Community
Excellence & Education
1100 S. Cameron Street
Harrisburg, PA 17104
REGISTER NOW!
by calling
Dauphin County
Drug & Alcohol
(717)635.2254
#4 Case Management Overview & Intensive Case Management
Presented by Sarah Davis/Charlene Givens
Defines the practice of strength-based intensive case management services for
those with substance abuse disorders. Give a broad overview of the case
management concept and where it fits in substance abuse treatment. Space
limited to 25 persons. (6 credit hours)
Intensive Case Management
Defines the practice of strength-based intensive case management services for
those with substance abuse disorders. Examines the process of service planning
and case monitoring, including documentation practices. Current BDAP
regulations governing this service, as well as the Inventory for Support
Services (ISS) will be reviewed. Space limited to 25 persons. (6 credit hours)
Monday, April 27 & Tuesday, April 28
9:00 am—4:00 pm
(Please register by April 20th)
#5 Series for Non Profit Organization
Presenter TBA
Are you a newly established non-profit or an established non-profit wondering
how to secure funding in these difficult times? Do you need assistance on
building coalitions and relationships in your community? Do you want to learn
more about the Federal strategies for Prevention that will prepare your
organization for the future? Then this is the training for you . Space limited
to 25 persons.
Wednesday, May 13, Thursday, May 14 & Friday, May 15
9:00 am—4:00 pm
(Please register by May 8th)
#6 Generic Drugs 101
Presented by Sherry Clouser
A dynamic and fast-paced training that offers practical information on the full
spectrum of drugs. Additionally, this exciting training provides attendees with
activities, games, and discussion to build refusal skills and protective
factors among youth. Along with this training is a complimentary binder chock
full of information and resources. This is a can't miss training for anyone
interested in understanding the classifications and categories of drugs, what
to say to youth, and how to engage them in protecting themselves and others! Space
limited to 25 persons.
Wednesday, June 10
9:00 am—4:00 pm
(Please register by June 5th)
#7 Pervasive Drug Culture in Contemporary Society and Creative Activities for
Groups
Presented by Mavis Nimoh and Sherry Clouser
Ever wonder what your children are listening to and watching and how that
affects their perceptions of drug and alcohol use and abuse? This training will
review pop culture and lyrics, videos and sites available for consumption by
our youth and how to combat negative images and messages. Creative Activities
for groups is a training designed to enhance the prevention professional's
toolbox or anyone interested in activities that work with children and even
adults. Learn about art, music and play therapies. Space limited to 25 persons.
Thursday, June 11
9:00 am—4:00 pm (Please register by June 5th)
Due
to a schedule conflict the Fire Safety Training that is being held at Claudia
House has been pushed back 2 weeks. It is now scheduled for June 24th,
2009. All other details remain the same.
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
From: Terri Lynn Hamrick
[mailto:terri@...] Sent: Monday, May 04, 2009 4:40 PM To: 'SurvivorsIncAdvocate@yahoogroups.com'; 'Brandy L. Beltz';
'survivors@...' Cc: 'SurvivorsIncVolunteer@yahoogroups.com' Subject: Training opportunity!
Greetings!
As
you know, all volunteers are required to complete 8 hours of training a year to
stay active, and all full time and part time staff are required to have 20
hours of training per fiscal year. On Wednesday, June 10 at 1pm we will
be hosting a Fire Safety Training in the yard of Claudia House. All staff
are strongly encouraged to attend, and volunteers are welcome and warmly
invited!
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM
Executive Director
Survivors, Inc.
Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on the web! http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement
Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault
and strives to create a world in which violence against women and children
is unthinkable.
-----Original Message-----
From: Ed Jenkins [mailto:EJenkins@...]
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 12:27 PM
To: AEHampson@...; Anne Thomas; rescuemission1@...;
Cecilia Perdue; Cheryl Boyd; accessadams.family@...; Cindy Daley;
Darlene Brown; Dick Schmoyer; Donald Marritz; Duane Kanagy;
fekrause@...; Gail D'Angelo; gweikert@...; Glenn
Snyder; Gretchen Natter; Hannah Kaufman; Helena Racioppa; Hillary Hasson;
Holly Sutphin; Ivy Everson; James Upchurch; Janise Brown; Jennifer Gastley;
Jodi Knight; John McPaul; Judy Chambers; Katel Colgan; Kathy Gaskin; Kay
Stahl; lredding@...; Laura Reyka; Leasia Ayers-Caswell;
Lisa Moreno; Lou Diehl; Mary Hirsh; Megan Shreve; Melissa Arseme;
mphovis@...; Mindy Demorest; Mindy Hedrick; Natalie Grim; Pam
Keeney; Pam Sturgeon; Rob Thaeler; Roger Sprague; sdepasqua@...;
sstrayer@...; Stephanie Calp; sscanlon@...; Steve Niebler;
Stevens, Paul; Susan Gragg; Teresa Polvinale; terri@...
Subject: FW: Here to Help Event in Adams County
-----Original Message-----
From: Darlene Brown
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 5:18 AM
To: ACHAACIHC
-----Original Message-----
From: Gastley, Jennifer M [mailto:jgastley2@...]
Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 12:46 PM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: FW: Here to Help Event in Adams County
Subject: Here to Help Event in Adams County
The PA CareerLink in Adams County is helping to coordinate an event that is
intended to bring together state and local agencies and service providers,
together with residents of Adams County who may have been effected by the
downturn in the economy. Actually, anyone who may benefit by meeting with
one of the participating organizations is welcome to the event, and persons
from neighboring counties are welcome as well.
This "Here to Help" Event will take place on Wednesday, May 20, from 1:00 to
4:00 in the Robert Hoffman Community Room at Harrisburg Area Community
College - Gettysburg Campus. For more information on the Commonwealth's
Here to Help Initiative, you may want to visit www.heretohelp.pa.gov
I am contacting you to ask that you make your colleagues and the public you
serve aware of this event, and encourage their attendance. Attached to this
email are a flyer you may post and distribute, as well as a document that
includes the schedule for the day and the list of participating
organizations.
Thank you very much for considering this request to promote attendance at
Here to Help. I believe it will be an opportunity for persons with a
variety of needs to gather good information and make useful connections.
Please feel free to contact me with any questions.
Thanks again for your help.
Alan
Alan Dudley, Administrator
PA CareerLink Adams County
PA Department of Labor & Industry
150 V-Twin Dr.
Gettysburg, PA 17325
Phone: 717- 334-1173 Ext. 210 Fax: 717-334-3869 www.dli.state.pa.us
adudley@... Auxiliary aids and services are available upon request
to individuals with disabilities.
Equal Opportunity Employer/Program
______________________________________________________________________
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from disclosing this information to any party unless required to do so by
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As
you know, all volunteers are required to complete 8 hours of training a year to
stay active, and all full time and part time staff are required to have 20
hours of training per fiscal year. On Wednesday, June 10 at 1pm we will be
hosting a Fire Safety Training in the yard of Claudia House. All staff are
strongly encouraged to attend, and volunteers are welcome and warmly invited!
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on
the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement Survivors
supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and strives
to create a world in which violence against women and children is unthinkable.
Greetings!
Attached is the flyer for the Girls Night Out event that is occurring May 7,
2009 from 6pm-9pm at Town & Campus Hair Care- located at 8 Carlisle Street,
Gettysburg. Please join us!
Sorry for any cross postings-
-Terri
Terri L. Hamrick, MNM
Executive Director
Survivors, Inc.
Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit us on the web! http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission Statement
Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault
and strives to create a world in which violence against women and children
is unthinkable.
Terri
L. Hamrick, MNM Executive Director Survivors, Inc. Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
Email: Terri@...
Visit
us on the web!
http//:www.survivorsservices.org
Mission
Statement Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or
sexual assault and strives to create a world in which violence against women
and children is unthinkable.
The U-Visa program provides
immigration status to noncitizens victims of crimes who are assisting or are
willing to assist authorities investigating those crimes. It is one of the
few means by which an undocumented person can become a legal resident.
You are invited to
attend a training conducted by students from the Transnational Clinic at
the University of Pennsylvania Law School for a discussion of this important
program, including the U-Visa law enforcement certification
process.
- Learn about the U-Visa
- Understand the
importance of the U-Visa and its many benefits
- Understand their role
in the U-Visa application process and be able to complete the U-Visa
certification; and
- Be able to establish an
internal process for U-Visa certification.
The training will be conducted by second year law students from the University
of Pennsylvania.
Presenters: Vianney Lopez, Rebecca Maltzman, and Elena Steiger,
J.D. Candidates 2010