FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEContact: Michael Kharfen
Friday, May 7, 1999(202) 401-9215

HHS Announces $62 Million to Fund Battered Women's Shelters



HHS Secretary Donna E. Shalala along with Vice President Gore today announced the release of $62 million in grants to help develop and support shelters for women who are victims of domestic violence.

The Battered Women Shelter grants, authorized by the Violence Against Women Act of 1994, will fund shelters and support counseling, legal advocacy, emergency transportation, child care, referrals for medical care and substance abuse, and other services for women and children who are victims of domestic violence. Grants will be awarded to all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. territories.

"The days of domestic violence being just 'a family matter' are over," said Secretary Shalala. "It's a community matter, it's a criminal justice matter, and it matters to our nation."

"Domestic violence threatens lives, destroys relationships, and breaks apart families," said Olivia A. Golden, HHS assistant secretary for children and families. "Among the most tragic effects of family violence is the cycle of abuse that may be perpetuated by children and teenagers who see and experience brutality at home."

HHS' FY 1999 budget includes a total of $190 million for programs that address violence against women. Among the items funded are $45 million for grants to states for rape prevention and education programs; $15 million for programs to reduce sexual abuse among runaway, homeless and street youth; $6 million for coordinated community action programs; and $1.2 million for the National Domestic Abuse Hotline. The hotline, which began its fourth year of operation last week, logs about 100,000 calls a year.

Each year, an estimated 2.1 million U.S. women are raped and/or physically assaulted. Because some of these women experience victimization more than once, this means that an estimated 876,000 rapes and 5.9 million physical assaults are perpetrated against U.S. women annually.

In addition to the personal burden domestic violence causes, the financial burdens run into the billions of dollars. A 1996 National Institute of Justice study estimates the costs at more than $100 billion a year, including $67 billion from domestic violence against adults and $32 billion from child abuse as well as additional costs for law enforcement and the judicial system.

Grants released today represent 70 percent of the $88.8 million total amount available for family violence prevention and services in 1999, a fourfold increase in funding since 1993. For FY 2000, the President has proposed a $13.5 million increase to $102.3 million, which is expected to serve an additional 40,000 survivors of domestic violence.

The grants are being distributed to each state and territory on the basis of its population. No state will receive less than $400,000; territories will receive amounts equal to one-eighth of one percent of the total amount available for the year ($88,800).

The state and territorial grant amounts released today follow.

Alabama $ 935,096Nevada $ 400,000
Alaska 400,000New Hampshire 400,000
Arizona 969,016New Jersey 1,748,081
Arkansas 549,284New Mexico 400,000
California 6,976,129New York 3,979,576
Colorado 836,619North Carolina 1,602,553
Connecticut 716,477North Dakota 400,000
Delaware 400,000Ohio 2,445,081
District of Columbia
400,000
Oklahoma 722,385
 Oregon 701,158

Florida 3,151,272

 Pennsylvania 2,638,315

Georgia 1,609,118

 Puerto Rico 837,494

Hawaii 400,000

 Rhode Island 400,000

Idaho 400,000

 South Carolina 809,483

Illinois 2,592,578

 South Dakota 400,000

Indiana 1,278,235

 Tennessee 1,164,220

Iowa 624,127

 Texas 4,185,940

Kansas 562,852

 Utah 437,677

Kentucky 849,968

 Vermont 400,000

Louisiana 952,166

 Virginia 1,460,746

Maine 400,000

 Washington 1,210,833

Maryland 1,109,948

 West Virginia 400,000

Massachusetts 1,333,163

 Wisconsin 1,129,206

Michigan 2,099,535

 Wyoming 400,000

Minnesota 1,019,349

 American Samoa 88,800

Mississippi 594,365

 Guam 88,800

Missouri 1,172,755

 Northern Marianna Is 88,800

Montana 400,000

 Virgin Islands 88,800

Nebraska 400,000

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Note: HHS press releases are available on the World Wide Web at: http://www.hhs.gov.





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