In the News
Domestic abuse advocate: Cut in spending would hurt victims in
Merrimack Valley
By Edward Mason
The Eagle Tribune
May 16, 2008
BOSTON — Domestic abuse victims would suffer if House lawmakers
approve plans to cut or freeze spending on emergency shelters and
violence prevention programs in the budget they're considering this
week, victims' advocates said.
Mary O'Brien, deputy director of the YWCA of Greater Lawrence, said
the $27.9 billion House budget, which lawmakers are debating this
week, would severely affect her ability to provide services to battered
women.
"The ideal situation is to somehow increase the funding so
women don't die, children aren't left without parents, and people
have prevention services," O'Brien said.
The state has not increased spending for domestic violence prevention
in eight years, which O'Brien and other advocates said is a factor
in a rash of domestic homicides this year.
According to Jane Doe Inc., a statewide coalition of community-based
sexual assault and domestic violence groups, there were 10 domestic
homicides in Massachusetts in the first four months of the year.
One was a March murder-suicide in Lawrence, in which Joseph Domurat
killed his wife, Noreen.
"There's almost been one murder a week in Massachusetts (over
the past year)," O'Brien said. "The reason for that is
because for eight years we haven't had an increase (in funding)."
Overall, O'Brien and victims' advocates want the state to spend
$10.9 million more than the House is proposing, raising funding
on domestic violence programs to $41.7 million from the $30.5 million
spent this fiscal year.
The House would spend $29.46 million on the domestic violence line
items O'Brien and others want increased. Some programs within those
line items are cut while others are level-funded. Gov. Deval Patrick's
budget effectively level-funded those line items.
"We really need an increase," O'Brien said. "We're
a not-for-profit business but we're a business. Our cost of doing
business has gone up."
Mary Lauby, executive director of Jane Doe Inc., said $10 million
now is a small investment to reduce domestic abuse.
"We're easily spending over $50 million on investigating and
prosecuting domestic violence homicides," Lauby said. "We're
asking for less than half of that in programs we know will bring
that rate down."
The YWCA of Greater Lawrence serves 10 area communities, including
Amesbury, Andover, Haverhill, Lawrence, Methuen and North Andover.
It provides a variety of services to domestic abuse victims. It
offers emergency shelter and counseling to abuse and rape victims.
It has two legal advisers in Lawrence District Court. It provides
violence prevention courses in area public and private schools.
House lawmakers are debating the budget this week. The Senate takes
up the budget next month.
A spokesman for House Ways and Means Chairman Rep. Robert DeLeo,
D-Winthrop, denied House leaders were slashing spending on domestic
violence prevention and treatment.
James Eisenberg, chief of staff to DeLeo, said the House Ways and
Means budget plan actually increases spending on domestic violence
prevention by $175,000 over this year's budget. He also said that
the draft spending plan fully funds a batterer's intervention program
at about $800,000.
"The chairman remains deeply committed to providing victims
of domestic violence and sexual assault with the care, protection
and services they need," Eisenberg said, "and will be
working to the best of his ability to address those concerns in
the days ahead."
Copyright © 1999-2008 cnhi, inc.
|