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The California Assembly just
passed a domestic violence bill which will perpetuate the state’s harmful policy
of excluding men and their children from receiving state-funded domestic
violence services. Under AB 2051, only “battered women” are eligible for the
shelters, hotel vouchers, counseling and legal services the state provides
victims of domestic violence. Governor Schwarzenegger should veto this misguided
legislation.
Because AB 2051 is based on the
discredited premise that men are rarely the victims of intimate
partner abuse, the bill has aroused considerable opposition from
domestic violence researchers and treatment providers. In May
more than 50 experts signed an opposition letter to the
Legislature. They wrote:
“The data is without
question–domestic violence affects both men and women. The politicization of
this issue must stop and services must be provided to all children and their
parent victims.”
The signatories include many
of the most prominent authorities in the family violence field. As Bay Area
court-certified batterer intervention provider John Hamel, LCSW, explained in
his testimony against the bill, research shows that a third of domestic
violence-related injuries are incurred by heterosexual males.
The widely-reported Maegan
Black case provides an example of the harm done to California’s children by
current state policies. Black, a young Sacramento-area woman, spent a
nightmarish childhood trapped in a home with a violent, mentally-ill mother.
Black’s father David was partially disabled, and thus financially dependent on
his wife. David and Maegan attempted on numerous occasions to get help from
domestic violence service providers, and were consistently rebuffed. Last fall
Black, now 22, filed a lawsuit against the state.
Current policies often trap
abused fathers like David and their children. They can't leave their wives
because this would leave their children unprotected in the hands of an abuser.
If they take their children, they can be arrested for kidnapping. Moreover, they
would probably lose custody of their children in the divorce anyway, again
leaving their children in harm's way.
AB 2051 was originally introduced
for the purpose of addressing domestic
violence within the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender
communities. Lobbyist Michael Robinson of the California
Alliance for Families and Children, which opposes the bill,
explains:
“The bill’s original
language was gender-neutral, and the words ‘female,’ ‘woman’ and ‘women’ were
stricken from the current state statute and replaced with the gender neutral
term ‘victim.’ However, because of pressure from misguided women’s groups, the
author later amended the bill back to gender-specific--and
discriminatory--language.”
Under the version of AB 2051
passed by the Legislature, even gay males--originally one of the bill’s primary
intended beneficiaries--may be excluded from state DV services. By vetoing the
bill, Schwarzenegger can make it clear that it’s time to end the state’s
discriminatory policies and bring them into line with research and expert
opinion. A veto will return the issue to the Legislature next year, so that a
solution can be crafted to serve the needs of all victims of domestic violence
and their children.
This article first appeared in
the Orange County Register (9/20/06).
Mike
McCormick is the Executive Director of the American Coalition for Fathers and
Children, the world’s largest shared parenting organization.
Their
website
is
www.acfc.org.
Glenn Sacks serves on the advisory board of Stop Abuse for
Everyone, an international domestic violence organization. His
columns have appeared in dozens of the largest newspapers in the
United States. His website is
www.GlennSacks.com.
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