|
|  |
Printer Friendly
Text Version Email Page
| e-Report 11/25/02 |

November 25, 2002
| This
e-Report from the Board is distributed several times per year and
is available on MDVPTB's
Web site in the Professional Resources section. The link in
each headline takes you directly to a brief article and links to
additional resources. Current members of the Board
are: James A. Fink (Chair), Ferne Farber, Shirley Mann Gray, Michelle
Hayes, Catherine Christ Lucas, The Honorable Darnell Jackson, The
Honorable Edward Sosnick, and Debi Cain (Executive Director). |
| In
this report... |
| |
|
|
| MDVPTB
receives $1.1 million federal grant to develop safe havens and model supervised
visitation practice.
Governor
John Engler and the Family
Independence Agency announced in late October that the Michigan
Domestic Violence Prevention and Treatment Board (MDVPTB) has been
selected by the U.S. Department
of Justice to participate in the Safe Havens demonstration initiative
that will build domestic violence Safe Havens and develop a model supervised
visitation protocol. Michigan is the only state and one of three recipients
of this funding nationally. This three-year federal grant totals 1.1 million
dollars. The project goal is to provide adult and child survivors of domestic
violence, sexual assault and stalking, safety in supervised visitation
and exchange settings. The three-year program will focus on the following
objectives, to:
- provide
survivors a safe, affordable age-and activity-appropriate means of visitation
and exchange between parents separated because of domestic violence
or sexual assault
- reduce
trauma and anxiety to children of batterers who are afraid of visitation
with an abusive parent
- eliminate
the risk of emotional and physical abuse to children and/or child abductions
during visitation
- increase
information available to local supervised visitation centers'
staff and courts
- increase
existing visitation center capabilities
- create
policies, a model protocol and training opportunities.
MDVPTB will
be working with four pilot Michigan visitation centers and other partners
to execute the demonstration project. The four visitation centers are:
HAVEN in Pontiac;
Child and
Parent Center in Jackson, Muskegon County Safe Haven Project in Muskegon
(contact Sue Johnson at 231-759-7909 or Barb Olson at 231-724-6422); and
Child and Family Services
of Northwest Michigan in Traverse City. Additionally, MDVPTB will
be collaborating on this project with the State
Court Administrative Office and the Michigan
Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence. |
|
| MDVPTB
receives a $35,000 federal grant to implement a one-year dating violence
public awareness project.
Governor
John Engler and the Michigan
Domestic Violence Prevention and Treatment Board, Family Independence
Agency are pleased to announce that Michigan has received a federal
grant from the Department of Health and Human Services. This funding will
be 75% of the cost to implement a dating violence public awareness project
involving the design and development of messages and accompanying resource
information about dating violence. The messages will be played repeatedly
on movie theater screens during the 15 minutes before feature films begin.
Pilot projects will take place in four Michigan communities: Adrian, Grand
Rapids, Lansing and Mt. Pleasant. The projects' goals are to:
- build
public awareness that dating violence is prevalent and affects every
community
- inform
communities of the services and resources available to dating violence
survivors
- foster
community involvement to actively prevent dating violence
- raise
awareness that dating violence is a global human rights violation, intricately
linked to other forms of violence and oppression.
The timing
for this project is ideal because criminal justice protections against
domestic violence were extended April 1, 2002 to persons in dating
relationships. MDVPTB will be working in collaboration with the domestic
violence service provider agencies and institutions of higher education
located in the four communities as well as the Michigan
Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence.
The theater
screen campaign is the second recent initiative by the Board in this arena.
This month, the Board distributed its Dating Violence Youth Education
Package (DVYEP) to every high school in the state as well as the Intermediate
School Districts. The DVYEP is suitable for educators or youth-group leaders
of high-school age students. The package includes lesson plans for use
by group leaders and background and resource information, surveys and
other activities for students. It is also available in PDF format directly
from the Board's Web site (link to download index page). |
|
| Work
on Grants to Encourage Arrest (GTEA) projects beginning.
The MDVPTB
and its partners have begun work funded by the $750,000 federal grant
from the Office of Justice Programs to encourage the treatment of domestic
violence as serious violation of criminal law (See
article in October, 2002 e-Report). U.S. Attorneys Offices have named
liaisons to work on the GTEA's Full
Faith and Credit training initiative. Sheila Hackett Gaskell, Assistant
United States Attorney, is the representative from the Eastern
district and Leslie Hagen, Assistant U.S. Attorney, is the representative
from the Western
district. Work on other aspects of the multipart effort has also begun.
The primary goals of the grant are to:
1) increase
victim safety and offender accountability by providing the Attorney
General's assistance to local prosecutors that manage domestic
violence cases
2) increase the coordination between local prosecutors and State and Federal
law enforcement agencies
3) increase the information and training available and utilized by local
and Tribal law enforcement and prosecutors on Michigan's new Full
Faith & Credit legislation.
|
|
| PAAM
hires Violence Against Women Training Attorney.
The Prosecuting
Attorneys Association of Michigan (PAAM) has hired Paul Lochner for
its Violence Against Women Training Attorney position. Using federal S*T*O*P
dollars, MDVPTB fully funds the PAAM position to train prosecutors throughout
Michigan who handle domestic and sexual violence cases. Some of the projects
PAAM expects to undertake include:
- conducting
trial advocacy training seminars for prosecutors
- developing
a trial manual
- publishing
a Violence Against Women newsletter.
Lochner was
PAAM's Child Abuse Training Attorney for three years before being
named as the Violence Against Women Training Attorney. He has held Assistant
and Chief Assistant Prosecutor roles in Oakland, Livingston and Huron
counties. Additionally, he spent four years on active duty in the Navy
JAG. Mr. Lochner is a graduate of the University of Michigan and holds
a juris doctorate from the University of Notre Dame. |
|
| MCOLES
updates its officer manual.
Using S*T*O*P
funds provided through the MDVPTB,
the Michigan
Commission on Law Enforcement Standards (MCOLES) has updated The Michigan
Law Enforcement Response to Domestic Violence: Officer Manual. The update
includes all of the domestic
violence laws enacted in 2001 and that took effect in April and October
of this year. The
340-page manuals are being distributed to Michigan police training academies
and domestic violence instructors.
|
|
| Michigan
Judicial Institute publishes benchbook on Sexual Assault.
The Michigan
Judicial Institute (MJI) has published and distributed Michigan's
first judicial benchbook on Sexual Assault, under a federal S*T*O*P
Grant administered by MDVPTB.
The Sexual
Assault Benchbook addresses the substantive and procedural law
governing criminal sexual conduct and other sexual offenses, as well as
the nature and dynamics of sexual assault involving adult victims. The
650-page reference manual was shipped to 1,800 judges, magistrates and
other officials in the judicial system. It is an important tool for not
only the courts, but anyone who interacts with the civil and criminal
justice systems on sexual assault cases. The publication is the second
of its kind prepared by MJI
with S*T*O*P funding. The
Domestic Violence Benchbook: A Guide to Civil and Criminal Proceedings
was updated in 2001. To
learn more about other MJI publications, visit the Michigan
Judicial Institute website at http://courts.michigan.gov/mji/resources/publications.htm. |
|
| MDVPTB
governance style continues to enhance working practices.
Four years ago, as federal funding and legislative attention to domestic
violence was increasing, MDVPTB undertook a sustained effort to continuously
enhance its own working practices. That effort has been paying off as
the Board develops new partnerships and initiatives. The seven-member
MDVTPB
bases its working practices on the work of John Carver, called Policy
Governance®. The principles of Policy Governance® help MDVPTB
carefully create policy while holding the organization accountable for
achieving its missions and avoiding unacceptable business practices. This
style of governing adds leadership value in the fast-paced environment
of domestic violence policy development. The Carver model has helped the
Board clarify the role of the executive director and its membership, set
its values and vision in policy language, demonstrate ongoing accountability
for results, and keep a sensitive relationship with its constituency.
The MDVPTB
board members take their appointments seriously and have made the
commitment to excellence in governance, through the use of this governance
framework. |
|
| e-Report
Feature: Tribal Communities domestic and sexual violence efforts.
November
is American
Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month and that makes it an ideal
time to consider the unique challenges of responding to domestic and sexual
violence in tribal communities, as well as some examples of the innovative
programming designed to address them.
Of course,
perpetrators of domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking plague
nearly every culture worldwide. Unfortunately, however, studies such as
the 1999
Bureau of Justice Statistics report on American Indians and Crime
reveal that Native Americans are at greater risk than other Americans
of this and other types of violence. Studies also show that perpetrators
of violence against American Indians are often from a different racial
group.
Many efforts
are taking place at the Tribal, state and federal levels to better address
violence against Indian women. When Congress passed the Violence
Against Women Act (VAWA) of 2000, it specifically set aside 5% of
the funds to go to Indian Tribal Governments under the Grants to Combat
Violent Crimes Against Women. Another 5% of funding dollars was set aside
under the Grants to Encourage Arrest Policies and Enforcement of Protection
Orders Program, the Rural Domestic Violence and Child Victimization Enforcement
Grant Program, and the Legal Assistance for Victims Program and the Safe
Havens for Children Program. Additionally, the Violence
Against Women Office (VAWO) administers discretionary funding to Indian
Tribal Governments and Tribal Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault
Coalitions. These grants provide federally recognized Indian Tribes the
opportunity to develop and strengthen the tribal justice system's
response to violent crimes committed against Native American women. The
VAWO also offers technical assistance for implementation of these efforts.
VAWO has designated Mending
the Sacred Hoop, a S*T*O*P
Violence Against Women Technical Assistance Project, as one such site.
Michigan's
new laws regarding Full Faith and Credit and the training initiatives
to occur under the Grants to Encourage Arrest (see
related story in this edition of e-Report) illustrate one example
of how state and Tribal representatives are collaboratively addressing
some of the complicated, cross-jurisdictional issues of enforcing protection
orders.
In Michigan,
there are twelve Federally
Recognized Tribes, and several receive the VAWA funding. Each Tribe
approaches the issues within the context of its own cultural, social and
community structures, and many use a combination of VAWA dollars and other
funding to accomplish their individual goals.
In the Hannahville
Potawatomi Indian Community, for example, leaders took the approach of
assessing their existing community strengths and building on them to reduce
the rate of domestic violence by 75% between 1996-2001. In 2001, the Tribal
Council adopted new codes for domestic violence which, among other changes,
increased the number of domestic violence relationships to include, child
in common, dating relationships and same-sex relationships. One expected
result of the new code was a slight increase in domestic violence reports.
The increase, however, opened the door for victim advocate, Ruth Oja,
to begin prevention work through the Community school system.
Hannahville
also wrote a "Crossing Borders-Causing Crossing Borders" section
into its domestic violence code. It is listed as a potential additional
charge to domestic violence, should the domestic violence assailant subsequently
pursue a victim seeking safety with the Tribe. This crime is given the
strongest possible penalty within the Tribal Court - one year in
jail and a $5,000.00 fine. If the assailant is non-native, the Tribe has
the ability to ban him from the Tribal Community and sue for up to four
times the amount of the fine. Hannahville is also currently in the final
drafting stages for new sexual assault and victim rights codes as a way
of addressing these issues. For more information about the exciting programming
in the Hannahville Potawatomi Indian Community, contact Ruth Oja, Victim
Advocate, at ruthoja@hannahville.org.
The Lac Vieux
Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians is using community education
as one of its approaches to domestic violence and sexual assault. For
instance, the Tribe is currently producing a 2003 calendar using children's
drawings to speak out against violence in the community. The Lac Vieux
Desert Band conducted a contest among children ages 5-12, asking them
to draw pictures of the violence and crime they have seen or know about
in their community. Among other types of crime, many of the children's
drawings involved domestic violence. Thirteen drawings were selected as
winners and are now being compiled into the calendar for broad distribution.
Accompanying each drawing is a message intended to raise awareness and
call to action the members of the Tribe in combating violence in their
community. One example is a message drawn from a Chinese Proverb, "A
child's life is like a piece of paper on which every passerby leaves
a mark." Other messages encourage talking circles or family meetings
as a way to gather and communicate feelings about violent incidents. The
calendar will also offer a list of agencies and phone numbers relevant
to the community. The calendar is expected to be printed this month. For
more information about this and other exciting projects occurring within
the Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians, please contact
Barb Larson, Victim Advocate, at lvdvoca@skyenet.net
or check out their Web
site. |
|
What's
Ahead?
- SAVE THE
DATE! With support from the MDVPTB, the Institute
on Domestic Violence in the African American Community will be presenting
a one-day mini-conference, "Healing Through the Arts & the
Media: Ending Domestic Violence in the African American Community."
The mini-conference will be held on February 21, 2003. Watch for more
information in the new year.
|
|
About
the Michigan Domestic Violence Prevention and Treatment Board (MDVPTB).
The
Michigan
Domestic Violence Prevention and Treatment Board (MDVPTB) was legislatively
enacted in 1978 and administratively housed within the Michigan Family Independence
Agency. The seven-member Board is appointed by the Governor and charged
with focusing state activity on domestic violence. The Board administers
state and federal funding for domestic violence shelters and advocacy services,
develops and recommends policy in collaboration with other agencies, and
develops and provides technical assistance and training. |
|
| Many
resource materials are available through the Michigan
Resource Center on Domestic and Sexual Violence (MRCDSV). The Resource
Center is a unique collection of over 3,500 books and 300 videos on domestic
violence, sexual assault, stalking, violence prevention, nonprofit management,
medical and legal response to violence against women, public policy and
much more. The MRCDSV is a collaboration of the Michigan Domestic Violence
Prevention and Treatment Board and the Michigan Coalition Against Domestic
and Sexual Violence (MCADSV). The MDVPTB is the primary funder and owner
of the collection. Additional funding is provided by the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services and other generous supporters of the MCADSV. |
|
| The
MDVPTB e-Report
is developed and written by the Michigan
Domestic Violence Prevention and Treatment Board (MDVPTB) in association
with Mort Crim Communications,
Inc., who is under contract with MDVPTB to do final production and
distribution of the e-Report as well as maintain the e-Report address
database. |
| |
| This
e-Report is being sent to a limited number of leaders throughout the state.
Please feel free to forward it to your staff, domestic and sexual violence
coordinating council members, law enforcement, and anyone else you think
would benefit from seeing this information. Thank you.
© 2002.
All Rights Reserved. |
|
|
 |
|