Bill Text: NY J00874 | 2023-2024 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Memorializing Governor Kathy Hochul to proclaim May 2, 2023, as Domestic Violence Awareness and Prevention Day in the State of New York

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 42-2)

Status: (Passed) 2023-05-02 - ADOPTED [J00874 Detail]

Download: New_York-2023-J00874-Introduced.html

Senate Resolution No. 874

BY: Senator WEBB

        MEMORIALIZING  Governor  Kathy  Hochul to proclaim
        May 2, 2023,  as  Domestic  Violence  Awareness  and
        Prevention Day in the State of New York

  WHEREAS,  Domestic  violence  is  a pattern of coercive behavior and
tactics used by someone against their intimate partner in an attempt  to
gain  or  maintain  power  and  control,  and types of abuse can include
physical, sexual, psychological, technological and economic abuse; and

  WHEREAS, Domestic violence is not limited to specific  groups  based
on race, socioeconomic status, gender identity, sex, sexual orientation,
ethnicity, age, religious affiliation, or social location, but rather is
perpetrated by abusers from all social groups; and

  WHEREAS,  On  average,  nearly  20  people per minute are physically
abused by an intimate partner in the  United  States  --  more  than  10
million people over the course of a year; and

  WHEREAS,  Approximately  one in three women and one in four men have
experienced some form of domestic violence or interpersonal violence  in
their  lifetime,  and  one  in  ten women have been raped by an intimate
partner; and

  WHEREAS,  Due  to  systemic  racism,  racist  policies,  and  racist
societal  structures, both Black women and Black men experience intimate
partner violence at a disproportionately high rate, with 45.1% of  Black
women  and  40.1%  of  Black  men experiencing intimate partner physical
violence, intimate  partner  sexual  violence  and/or  intimate  partner
stalking in their lifetimes; and

  WHEREAS,  Domestic  violence  affects the LGBTQ+ community at a rate
equal to or  even  greater  than  that  experienced  by  the  cisgender,
heterosexual  community,  with 43.8% of lesbian women and 26% of gay men
experiencing rape, physical violence  and/or  stalking  by  an  intimate
partner  at  some  point  in  their  lifetime,  and more than 54% of the
transgender   and   gender   non-conforming   community   has   reported
experiencing  some  form  of intimate partner violence, with transgender
women of color experiencing heightened levels of violence; and

  WHEREAS, More than four in five American Indian  and  Alaska  Native
women and men have experienced violence in their lifetime, and more than
one in three have experienced violence in the past year; and

  WHEREAS,  Nearly  20.9%  of female high school students and 13.4% of
male high school students report being physically or sexually abused  by
a  dating  partner,  and 43% of dating college women report experiencing
violent or abusive behaviors from their partner; and

  WHEREAS, Researchers estimate that one in 15 children in the  United
States  are  exposed  to  intimate  partner  violence,  and children who
witness intimate partner violence growing up are three times more likely
as their peers to engage in violent behavior; and

  WHEREAS, Domestic violence survivors experience a host  of  physical
and  mental  health-related consequences at far greater rates than their
counterparts who have not been abused; and

  WHEREAS,  New  York  State  consistently has the greatest demand for
domestic violence support services in the country with  9,157  survivors
requesting services on just one day in 2022, and 951 unfulfilled service
requests  because  domestic  violence service providers did not have the
resources or staff to provide such services; and

  WHEREAS, In 2020, there were 165,577  orders  of  protection  issued
that required entry in the New York State Registry; and

  WHEREAS,  The  NYS  Office  of Children and Family Services reported
that nearly 48,000 survivors of domestic  violence  and  their  children
received services from New York residential and non-residential domestic
violence  service  providers,  and  more than 252,500 hotline calls were
received across the State in 2020; and

  WHEREAS, According to the NYS Division of Criminal Justice Services,
there were 61 intimate partner homicides in New York State in 2020; and

  WHEREAS, The cost of  a  single  homicide  is  estimated  at  $17.25
million  when  considering  medical  care,  lost  future earnings, other
related public programming and services, and property damage  and  other
losses; and

  WHEREAS,  The  economic  burden  of  domestic violence in the United
States is staggering, with costs to the U.S. economy estimated to exceed
$8.3 billion annually, with 21-60 percent of victims of intimate partner
violence losing their jobs due to reasons stemming from the abuse; and

  WHEREAS, Primary prevention strategies address the root  causes  and
conditions  that  make  domestic  violence  possible,  and public health
research has shown that implementing prevention activities  at  multiple
levels   on   the  social  ecology  scale  -  individual,  relationship,
community, and societal - will lead to lasting social change; and

  WHEREAS,  Primary  prevention  is  focused  on  establishing  gender
equality, cultivating, and promoting healthy relationship behaviors, and
changing conditions in communities and culture to stop domestic violence
before it starts; and

  WHEREAS,    Domestic   violence   advocates   consistently   provide
comprehensive and  compassionate  life-saving  services,  advocacy,  and
support  to  survivors  of  domestic  violence and their children, while
leading essential primary prevention efforts within their communities to
motivate the change needed to stop domestic violence from  happening  in
the first place; and

  WHEREAS,  As  part  of  executing  its  mission,  the New York State
Coalition Against Domestic Violence seeks  to  create  and  support  the
social  change  necessary  to prevent and confront all forms of domestic
violence, to ensure the availability and accessibility of innovative and
effective supports and services for all domestic violence survivors  and
their  families,  and  to  dismantle oppression, end systemic racism and
uproot the inequities that foster violence; and

  WHEREAS, New York  State  needs  to  continually  and  significantly
invest  in  services  and  supports  for domestic violence survivors and
their families in order to meet the rising demand for assistance and  to
continue  progress toward ending domestic violence once and for all; now
therefore, be it

  RESOLVED,  That  this Legislative Body pause in its deliberations to
memorialize Governor Kathy Hochul to proclaim May 2, 2023,  as  Domestic
Violence  Awareness  and Prevention Day in the State of New York; and be
it further

  RESOLVED, That copies of this  Resolution,  suitably  engrossed,  be
transmitted  to The Honorable Kathy Hochul, Governor of the State of New
York, and the New York State Coalition Against Domestic Violence.
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