Personal tools
You are here: home   Blogs   The GOAT Blog   Funding to fight domestic violence
Log in


Forgot your password?
New user?
 
The GOAT Blog

Funding to fight domestic violence

Document Actions
Tip Jar Donation

Your donation supports independent non-profit journalism from High Country News.

Enter amount:

$
Arla Shephard | Aug 28, 2009 03:51 PM

In recent weeks, the Obama administration has made safety on Indian reservations a major priority, doling out a slew of grants to tribes all over the West.

"The Department of Justice is well aware that Indian Country is struggling with complex law enforcement issues involving violent crime, violence against women and crimes against children, and that tribal communities are doing what they can with limited resources," said Deputy Attorney General David Ogden in a press release. 

Thirty-four percent of Indian or Alaska Native women will be raped or sexually assaulted during their lifetimes, compared to the national average of 21 percent, and 39 percent of Indian women will suffer domestic violence, compared to 25 percent nationally. 

Tribes in North and South Dakota received more than $1 million for shelters and domestic violence programsfour New Mexico tribes were awarded $1.2 million for equipment and law enforcement officers and the La Jolla band of Luiseno Indians in California received $400,000 for a domestic violence program

Most recently, the Dept. of Justice announced that 16 tribal communities in Washington will receive more than $5 million, primarily for the addition of new police officers and domestic violence programs, funded by the Justice Department's Office on Violence Against Women

Highlights in Washington include $633,968 to the Squaxin Island tribe for improved services to women who've experienced domestic violence; $633,703 for the development of a new women's shelter for the Swinomish Indian community; and several grants increasing the number of officers in various tribal police departments.

"This is going to assist us greatly," says Joe Kautz, Chief of Police for the Nisqually Indian Tribe, which received $152,100 that they'll use to hire an additional police officer. "We never have enough officers on the streets."

Over the last few years, there's been an uptick in crimes committed by youth on the Nisqually reservation, including graffiti, burglary, underage drinking and gang violence, Kautz says. Drug trafficking is also a problem (read "A culture of violence" for more on the rise of gang activity on Indian reservations). Having more police officers on the reservation will go a long way, Kautz says.

The Tulalip Tribes of Washington received $899,999 to renovate a safe house and $423,170 for two new police officers that will be placed on the swing and night shifts, which are usually the busiest, says Mike Catlett, police commander for the Tulalip tribe police department.

In a week, the Tulalip tribal police receive between three to four calls related to domestic violence, Catlett says. "It's here just like on any city or reservation."

 

Email Newsletter

The West in your Inbox

Follow Us

Follow us on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter! Follow our RSS feeds!
  1. Fearful of Agenda 21, an alleged U.N. plot, activists derail land-use planning | A two-year planning process in La Plata County, Co...
  2. Billboard corporations use money and influence to override your vote | In Salt Lake City and other Western communities, b...
  3. The logging town of Darrington, Wash., fights to save a fire lookout | A lawsuit raises questions about how far environme...
  4. Feeding the deer | A rural Californian doesn't apologize for feeding ...
  5. Residents of Montana's High Plains are angry - but not at the real threats | Though climate change and the economy are the issu...
  1. Fearful of Agenda 21, an alleged U.N. plot, activists derail land-use planning | A two-year planning process in La Plata County, Co...
  2. Billboard corporations use money and influence to override your vote | In Salt Lake City and other Western communities, b...
  3. The logging town of Darrington, Wash., fights to save a fire lookout | A lawsuit raises questions about how far environme...
  4. Residents of Montana's High Plains are angry - but not at the real threats | Though climate change and the economy are the issu...
  5. Picking ranchers' brains, from Colorado to Mongolia | Colorado State University professor Maria Fernande...
More from Culture & Communities
Seal Stories from the Pribilof, middle of everywhere Two NOAA documentaries tell a tale of Alaska's Pribilof Islands and northern fur seals, their most famous inhabitants
Ready-made solar houses Homes built to generate electricity, stopping Salt Lake sprawl, the drug game
Searching for the truth about American Indians: A review of All Indians Do Not Live in Teepees (or Casinos) Catherine C. Robbins seeks to go beyond the stereotypes about Native Americans in her essays in All Indians Do Not Live in Teepees (or Casinos).
All Culture & Communities

Most recent from the blogs

 
© 2012 High Country News, all rights reserved. | privacy policy | terms of use | powered by Plone | site by Groundwire | design by Ryan Foster

HCN Logo High Country News in your inbox!


Sign up now to receive our weekly email newsletter!

- The best weekly collection of Western environmental news

- An at-a-glance look at our latest news and analysis