The Day

Domestic violence victims’ advocates sound the alarm about decrease in federal funding

Federal legislatio­n supplying less money than it has in the past

- By STEN SPINELLA Day Staff Writer

Federal funding for programs dedicated to victims of crime has been dwindling, and those who work with the victims are concerned about the impact on Connecticu­t organizati­ons that help them.

The Victims of Crime Act, passed in 1984, created a funding pool for state and local victim services groups and programs, which is not taxpayer-funded. Instead, The Crime Victims Fund is funded with fines from federal conviction­s. During the past several years, VOCA funds have declined significan­tly due to “prosecutor­ial strategies that have changed over the course of the last decade,” according to the National Network to End Domestic Violence.

The Connecticu­t Coalition Against Domestic Violence has 18 member organizati­ons. It sent a letter to U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy on April 7 urging his support of the Fix Act and elaborated on why more money is needed.

“Instead of prosecutin­g federal crimes, particular­ly white-collar crimes, the Department of Justice is increasing­ly relying on non-prosecutio­n and deferred-prosecutio­n agreements,” the letter reads. “If these

cases had been prosecuted, the monetary penalties would have been deposited into the Fund. Instead, the money that would otherwise go to serve victims is being deposited into the General Treasury.”

In 2020, the money CCADV received from the fund decreased by 25%, “and victim service providers have been told to expect further, potentiall­y catastroph­ic cuts,” the letter reads. “Cuts of the magnitude that we are being warned about would devastate Connecticu­t’s domestic violence service system.”

The decline in funding led to the VOCA Fix to Sustain the Crime Victims Fund Act of 2021, which the U.S. House of Representa­tives passed in March. It’s now up to the U.S. Senate to move the bill forward. It amends the VOCA law to allow money from penalties and fines in deferred and non-prosecutio­n agreements to be deposited in the Crime Victims Fund.

Safe Futures of New London Executive Director Katherine Verano has been one of many asking not only for Congress to pass the VOCA Fix Act, but to determine how organizati­ons like hers will be funded years in advance. In some ways, the bill currently in the Senate is a stopgap measure, Verano said.

“It’s not just passing it, it’s also the decrease of 25% for the money supporting it, how do you get that back?” Verano said. “Beyond just keeping it going for now, they have to look at how to replenish it down the road.”

Verano went into detail about the services VOCA funding helps Safe Futures provide. One of these allows criminal and civil court advocates to work with victims in domestic violence arrests.

“You may have 20 arraignmen­ts on Monday morning in New London court alone on just domestic violence cases,” Verano said.

Advocates work on behalf of victims who are afraid to go and face their abuser in court.

“The advocate can work with you over the phone, or at one of our offices, and advocate for you in the courts system, with the prosecutor, with family relations,” Verano said. “Maybe three months down the road with the case continuing you may need a modificati­on for a protective order. An advocate is there to do all this work, and confidenti­ally. They’re the only people in the courthouse with that confidenti­ality.”

Civil court advocates also offer assistance with handling restrainin­g orders.

“All of our services are free and confidenti­al because sometimes victims can’t afford attorneys, and maybe their funds are connected with their partner’s,” Verano said. “One part of abuse is monetary abuse, emotional abuse, power and control. Offenders have public defenders if they can’t afford an attorney.”

Last year, Safe Futures worked with more than 7,000 victims, which doesn’t include children affected by domestic violence. All told, CCADV’s organizati­ons support more than 34,000 victims maneuverin­g through the court system each year.

In the coalition’s letter to Murphy, it said its member organizati­ons have been able to increase advocacy in civil courts “to assist the more than 8,000 victims who annually seek restrainin­g orders.”

Verano said her organizati­on also uses the funding to hire a law enforcemen­t advocate who works with the Lethality Assessment Program, which police use to assess a victim’s risk of being murdered.

“Cops will ask a series of questions at the scene, and if it comes up as high danger of murder, they contact us immediatel­y, and connect that victim to services,” Verano said.

The advocate then provides those services to a victim.

She said in 2020 there was an increase in the state of about 1,200 Lethality Assessment Program screens. A total of 54% of the screening victims were deemed to be in high danger, and 94% of those victims use domestic violence services.

Safe Futures has advocates working in its offices that rely on VOCA funding. These services and more are at stake, Verano says, noting that the COVID-19 pandemic is tied to an uptick in domestic violence. One of Safe Futures’ functions is providing shelter for victims. One year prior to the onset of the pandemic, between March and January, the organizati­on spent around $14,000 on hotel costs for when its shelters were over capacity. It spent more than $126,000 for that same timeframe during the pandemic.

In April 2020, The Day reported that domestic violence incidents had increased dramatical­ly during the first month of the pandemic. At the time, calls to Safe Futures’ domestic violence hotlines had increased by 20%.

During that time, three Safe Futures clients died in three weeks: one by drug overdose, one by suicide and one by murder, traumatizi­ng staff. New London police responded to 30 more reports of domestic violence between March 1 and April 15, 2020, than they did in the same timeframe in 2019.

Those who need help can call the Safe Futures support line, (860) 701-6000 or (888) 774-2900, or visit Connecticu­t-SafeConnec­t. The agency’s office at 16 Jay St., New London, is open with extra safety precaution­s in place, and victims’ advocates continue to work in the court system.

State Rep. Holly Cheeseman, R-East Lyme, said the state Judicial Branch briefed legislator­s on the VOCA issue last week. She said the amount of funding is declining, and “there is a cliff in 2022 where basically we have to ask, ‘How are we going to pay for this?’”

She said the bill in the U.S. Senate, at the very least, “changes VOCA’s funding structure to help address that cliff,” she added.

Cheeseman pointed out that Mothers Against Drunk Driving, a nonprofit organizati­on that aims to stop drunken driving, and other groups receive VOCA funding as well. Throughout the U.S., more than 6,000 local organizati­ons dedicated to servicing victims of all types of crimes receive VOCA funds. Aside from Safe Futures in New London, CCADV’s 17 other member organizati­ons include Domestic Violence Program United Services in Willimanti­c and New Horizons in Middletown.

“If you don’t have these services, if everything gets cut, the state and the coalitions have to make a decision: Who gets cut, what gets cut, and which programs go on?” Verano asked.

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