For
immediate release
April 1, 2004
Contacts:
Toni K. Troop, Jane Doe Inc., 617-557-1807
Jennifer Johnson, MNA, 781-830-5718
Sexual-Assault
Survivor, Legislators, Advocates and Nurses to Launch
“Sexual Assault Awareness Month” at Statehouse Press
Conference
Survivor’s
story deeply tied to legislative initiatives that aim to continue
providing
local victims with necessary services and resources
(Boston,
MA:) “This crime took less than one hour, yet has deprived
me of the innocent outlook on life and my freedom. I'm the person
that you read about in the newspaper. I'm the one that you hear
about on the news and consciously or unconsciously say it's just
somebody else, and it will never happen to me. But today or tomorrow,
you or someone that you love could be that someone else,” avowed
Debbie Smith, a survivor and national activist in the movement
to end rape and sexual assault.
Virginians
Debbie Smith along with her husband Rob Smith have traveled an incredible
journey since 1989 when Debbie was raped in her own backyard. The
Smiths told a Statehouse audience their powerful story about the
pain and terror of sexual assault, as well as their resiliency and
ultimate survival, at a joint press conference co-sponsored by Jane
Doe Inc. and the Massachusetts Nurses Association to launch Sexual
Assault Awareness Month on Thursday, April 1 at 10 a.m. at the Grand
Staircase in the State House.
Lt.
Governor Kerry Healey kicked off the press conference by issuing
a proclamation declaring April as Sexual Assault Awareness Month.
Senator
Joan Menard (D-Somerset), Senator Richard Moore (D-Uxbridge), and
Representative Peter Koutoujian (D-Waltham) outlined a series
of legislative and budget measures currently before the Legislature,
including one that aims to restore funding to the state’s
rape crisis centers, one that aims to codify the state’s Sexual
Assault Nurse Examiner program (SANE) and one that encourages and
supports the education and training of health professional students
regarding sexual and domestic violence. Lisa Hartwick, LICSW, Clinical
Director at the Boston Area Rape Crisis Center (BARCC), Lucia Zuniga,
Director of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health SANE Program,
and Donald Hayes, Director of the Boston Police Department’s
Crime Lab spoke to the cutting edge work being done in Massachusetts
to provide victim services, to hold offenders accountable and,
ultimately, to make our communities healthier and safer.
“It's
easier to think that sexual violence is someone else's problem.
It isn't. Sexual violence affects countless women, men and children
in the Commonwealth every single day; and in turn, every single
one of us has a role to play in ending this devastating crime and
the stigma associated with it,” stated Nancy Scannell, Director
of Government Affairs of Jane Doe Inc.
Scannell
highlighted the critical and often life-saving work of the 18 DPH-funded
Rape Crisis Centers in Massachusetts that are members of Jane Doe
Inc., the Massachusetts Coalition Against Sexual Assault and Domestic
Violence. In FY2003, these Centers responded to 15,424 hotline calls,
provided 2,662 individuals with 12,947 sessions of counseling and
advocacy and provided assistance to 533 individuals having forensic
evidence collected, despite the severe reduction in funding for
Rape Crisis Services in the FY04 budget. Scannell pointed to the
exemplary private-public partnerships and the incorporation of volunteer
support to illustrate the efficient and effective use of public
funding by rape crisis centers.
“Registered
nurses in the Commonwealth are often the first to work with victims
of sexual assault, but it is the expertise provided by nurses affiliated
with the SANE program and counselors at local rape crisis center
that truly makes a difference in the lives of survivors,” said
Karen Higgins, RN and President of the Massachusetts Nurses Association
(MNA).
“This
difference is exemplified in the story that Debbie Smith will
tell today, because her positive outcome ties directly to the
core services she received from her local rape crisis program.
The availability of these types of programs in Massachusetts
is essential for victims like Debbie, and state government must
be dedicated to keeping these programs in place.”
The
launching of Sexual Assault Awareness Month brings attention to
the continued partnership between Jane Doe Inc. and the MNA to
urge lawmakers to adopt legislation that would codify the SANE
program in Massachusetts; to secure funding for the comprehensive
services provided both by SANE and Rape Crisis Centers; to advocate
for resources for DNA testing and oversite at the state and Boston
Crime Labs; and to support the introduction of the first Pediatric
SANE protocol in the country that has been developed by theMassachusetts
Department of Public Health’s SANE Program.
Jane
Doe Inc. is the statewide coalition of more than sixty domestic
violence and sexual assault programs in Massachusetts. Jane Doe
Inc. advocates for responsive public policy, promotes collaboration,
raises public awareness, and supports our member programs to provide
comprehensive prevention and intervention services. We are guided
by the voices of survivors.
Founded
in 1903, The Massachusetts Nurses Association is the largest professional
health care organization in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Its
22,000 members, working in 85 health care facilities, advance the
nursing profession by fostering high standards of nursing practice,
promoting the economic and general welfare of nurses in the workplace,
projecting a positive and realistic view of nursing and by lobbying
the legislature and regulatory agencies on health care issues affecting
nurses and the public.
For more information or to schedule an interview, please contact
Toni Troop at Jane Doe Inc. by phone at 617-212-7571 or Jennifer
Johnson at the MNA at 781-830-5718. For additional background on
Jane Doe Inc. or to learn more about sexual assault and domestic
violence, visit our website at www.JaneDoe.org. |