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Stop Violence Against Women
Two Issues Need Your Attention:
Take Action
on the Violence Against Women Act
Congress went home last week and failed to finalize the reauthorization of
the Violence Against Women Act. It will not be easy to convene a conference
committee and come to an agreement about what the final VAWA2005 should look
like. But it is not impossible. Both the House and the Senate will return for
a short time in December and the leadership must hear from us that we
expect them to get VAWA's differences worked out and passed!
If you haven't done so already, please sign the VAWA
petition urging Congressional leaders to pass VAWA NOW! Forward
this appeal to your colleagues and coalition partners as well, because
we will be delivering the final batch of petitions to Congress the week of December
5 and need as many signatures as possible. We currently have almost
10,000 signatures with names from every state. Good job!
Call the offices of the House and Senate leadership with this
simple message: Add passing VAWA to your December agenda and get
it passed before services are reduced and programs are eliminated. Women, children
and families are relying on you.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn), 202-224-3135
House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill), 202-225-0600
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev), 202-224-5556
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Cal), 202-225-0100
Send an email to your Senators and Representative
asking them to help expedite this process.
Background:
Although VAWA's authorization ran out September 30 along with the funding for
all government activities and programs, Congress voted to continue funding at
last year's levels through December 17th. But without passage of VAWA 2005,
no funding stability or cost of living increases are guaranteed and any new
programs in the bill will be unable to get off the ground.
On Tuesday afternoon, October 4, the Senate passed its version of VAWA 2005,
S. 1197, by a unanimous consent agreement, meaning that all of the Senators
had no objections (or had withdrawn their objections) to the bill. A less comprehensive
version of VAWA 2005 passed the House of Representatives on September 28 as
H.R. 3402, the Department of Justice's yearly authorizing and funding bill
While the House version included reauthorization of crucial VAWA programs,
it does not achieve all that is needed. At the last minute just before the vote,
the Republican leadership dropped important provisions dealing with immigrants
and women of color.
The Senate bill still includes many of these House-dropped provisions, but
faced its own trimming as a key program was dropped that would have extended
coverage for unemployment insurance to domestic violence survivors who lose
their jobs as they hide or flee from violence.
Whenever there are differences between similar bills that are passed in the
House and Senate a "conference committee" with representatives from
both houses, must meet to work out the differences between the two bills and
come up with one final bill before the President can sign it. Because the House
bill is part of a larger Department of Justice bill, H.R. 3402, and the Senate
bill, S. 1191, is free-standing, this makes holding a conference committee even
harder.
Take Action
on the Army's proposed Sexual Assault Data Management System
There is still time to submit comments on the Army's proposed new sexual assault
data management system and ask the Department of Defense to rethink its proposal
to collect invasive and personal data about sexual assaults in the military.
Take
action today; the deadline is Friday, Nov. 25. Over 3300 comments
have been submitted through the NOW website to Donald Rumsfeld, David Chu and
the Army's Office of Privacy.
If your comments are automatically rejected or bounced back due to a full mail
box or program glitch, print your comments and fax them to Janice Thornton,
Department of the Army, Privacy Act Manager, fax: (703) 428-6522.
Thanks for all you do!
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