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K00749 Summary:

BILL NOK00749
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORBichotte Hermelyn
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSRButtenschon, Lupardo, Pheffer Amato, Rosenthal L
 
 
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K00749 Text:

 
Assembly Resolution No. 749
 
BY: M. of A. Bichotte Hermelyn
 
        MEMORIALIZING  Governor  Kathy  Hochul to proclaim
        April 26, 2022, as Domestic Violence  Awareness  and
        Prevention Day in the State of New York
 
  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 and to ensure the availability and accessibility of  innovative
and  effective supports and services for all domestic violence survivors
and their families; and
 
  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; 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 women and men over the course of a year; and
 
  WHEREAS, Approximately one in three women and one in 10 men  in  the
United  States  have  experienced  some  form  of  domestic  violence or
interpersonal violence in  their  lifetime,  yet  only  43%  of  violent
victimizations are reported to police; and
 
  WHEREAS,  Domestic  violence  affects the LGBTQ+ community at a rate
equal to or even  greater  than  that  of  the  cisgender,  heterosexual
community; and
 
  WHEREAS,  Survivors of domestic violence experience a host of health
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  6,646  survivors
requesting services on just one day in 2021, and 766 unfulfilled service
requests  because  domestic  violence service providers did not have the
resources to provide such services; and
 
  WHEREAS, According to the Mayor's office, the police  department  in
New  York  City responded to more than 233,000 domestic incident reports
in 2020, of which nearly 106,000 involved intimate partners; and
 
  WHEREAS, The NYS Office of Children  and  Family  Services  reported
that  more than 48,000 survivors of domestic violence and their children
received services from residential,  non-residential,  and  transitional
housing  programs, and nearly 322,000 hotline calls were received across
the State in 2019; and
 
 
  WHEREAS, According to the NYS Division of Criminal Justice Services,
there were 60 intimate partner homicides in New York State in 2020, with
domestic  homicides  accounting for 14 percent of all homicides reported
in the State; and
 
  WHEREAS,  Intimate  partner  violence  starts  early  and  continues
throughout  the  lifespan,  as  demonstrated  by  the fact that about 11
million women and five million men  who  reported  experiencing  contact
sexual violence, physical violence or stalking by an intimate partner in
their  lifetime said that they first experienced these forms of violence
before the age of 18; and
 
  WHEREAS, The economic burden of  domestic  violence  in  the  United
States  is  staggering,  with  costs to the U.S. economy estimated to be
between $5.8 billion and $12.6 billion annually, with 21-60  percent  of
victims  of  intimate  partner  violence  often losing their jobs due to
reasons stemming from the abuse; and
 
  WHEREAS, The cost of  a  single  homicide  is  estimated  at  $17.25
million  when  considering  medical  care, lost future earnings, related
public programming and services, and property damage and  other  losses;
and
 
  WHEREAS,  Researchers estimate that one in 15 children in the United
States are exposed to intimate partner violence, for  a  total  of  five
million  children,  and  children  who witness intimate partner violence
growing up are three times more likely  as  their  peers  to  engage  in
violent behavior; 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  our  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  April  26th,  2022,  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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