Amended in Assembly August 18, 2016

Senate Concurrent ResolutionNo. 150


Introduced by Senator Gaines

(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Bates, Block, Hall, and Wieckowski)

June 9, 2016


Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 150—Relative to Domestic Violence Awareness Month.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SCR 150, as amended, Gaines. Domestic Violence Awareness Month.

This measure would proclaim the month of October 2016, and each following October, as Domestic Violence Awareness Month.

Fiscal committee: no.

P1    1WHEREAS, Domestic violence is a significant public health
2and safety issue that affects women, men, and children of all racial,
3religious, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups in California; and

4WHEREAS, Nearly 20 people per minute are physically abused
5by an intimate partner, which means more than 10 million women
6and men in the United States are abused each year; and

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7WHEREAS, Women are four times more likely than men to be
8victims of domestic violence with more than 800,000 women being
9violently assaulted by an intimate partner between 2002 and 2011
10according to United States Department of Justice statistics. Of all
11murder-suicides, 72 percent involve an intimate partner and 94
12percent of the victims of these crimes are female; and

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13
WHEREAS, More than 800,000 women were violently assaulted
14by an intimate partner between 2002 and 2011, according to
P2    1statistics from the United States Department of Justice. Of all
2murder-suicides, 72 percent involve an intimate partner; and

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3WHEREAS, California law enforcement agencies received over
4150,000 domestic violence-related calls in 2014, including reports
5of more than 100 domestic violence-related homicides. There are
6more than 20,000 additional phone calls placed each day to
7domestic violence hotlines nationwide; and

8WHEREAS, A victim is not alone in suffering the impacts of
9domestic violence. Studies indicate that children who witness
10domestic violence experience long-term consequences, such as
11difficulty at school, substance abuse, and serious adult health
12problems, as well as an increased risk of becoming a domestic
13violence victim or abuser as an adult; and

14WHEREAS, Because 75 percent of domestic violence victims
15have children at home underbegin delete the age of 18,end deletebegin insert 18 years of age,end insert the
16impact of domestic abuse has both immediate and generational
17effects. In 2011, nearly 21 percent of children in the United States
18were exposed to domestic violence, either as victims or indirectly
19as witnesses, illustrating the magnitude of this problem; and

20WHEREAS, The cost of domestic violence exceeds $5.8 billion
21each year in the United States--$4.1 billion in direct medical and
22health care services and nearly $1.8 billion in lost productivity,
23which includes approximately 8,000,000 days of work lost by
24abused women each year--equivalent to more than 32,000 full-time
25jobs; and

26WHEREAS, Domestic violence programs in California provide
27essential, lifesaving services to nearly 6,000 victims and their
28children each day as they flee violence. Overall, state-funded
29domestic violence programs provide individual counseling to an
30average of nearly 34,000 victims each year; and

31WHEREAS, Despite recent reductions in domestic violence
32incidents, there is an ongoing need to educate the public about
33domestic violence and to provide all victims access to programs
34and services; and

35WHEREAS, The Legislature recognizes the vital role that all
36Californians can play in preventing, and one day ending, domestic
37violence; now, therefore, be it

38Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly
39thereof concurring,
That the Legislature recognizes October 2016,
P3    1and each following October, as Domestic Violence Awareness
2Month; and be it further

3Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of
4this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.



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