Ohio domestic violence survivor advocates await federal funding answers, hope for state help

By: Eliot Pierce

Sharing is caring!

The elimination of some federal funding opportunities has left Ohio’s activists working to offer supports for survivors of domestic abuse apprehensive about their financing sources, but they remain hopeful for additional state help.

Advocacy groups were informed at the start of February that the federal Office on Violence Against Women’s 2025 Notices of Funding Opportunities website had been taken down, and applicants were instructed to halt any ongoing submissions.

The action follows actions taken by the White House to block grants and other funding sources on a wide range of issues. A judge temporarily halted a freeze on grants, loans, and other financing that may have affected local organizations that deal with housing, poverty, health care, and other concerns after lawsuits were filed.

Following the announcement of federal funding, leaders of the Ohio Alliance to End Sexual Violence contacted supporters, warning that a sudden cutoff would jeopardize vital programs that offer safety, healing, and justice to victims of dating violence, sexual assault, domestic abuse, and stalking.

According to the group’s email, survivors and the organizations that assist them face risk and uncertainty in the absence of these crucial monies. Every financial delay puts lives in danger, regardless of how long-term the problem is.

Public Policy Director Emily Gemar said the alliance’s main role is to provide training and technical support to the state’s 36 rape crisis centers.

GET THE HEADLINES FOR THE MORNING.

According to Gemar, the coalition is the only state coalition that offers direct shelter to survivors in need and has a separate legal clinic in addition to its other services.

The legal clinic, which enables survivors to have an advocate in court with them and someone who can provide information on legal alternatives and crime victim rights, is maintained with funding from both the federal and state levels. Additionally, the funding maintains an emergency room response team and a 24/7 hotline response team for survivors in need of medical resource assistance or forensic examinations.

See also  States debate prison spending as needs grow but budgets tighten

According to Gemar, our advocates wear several hats and must be specialists in the criminal justice system, the gathering of medical evidence, and the social services sector.

As recommended by Gov. Mike DeWine’s executive budget plan, the alliance is grateful for state funding through a rape crisis center line item in the budget, which has maintained $15.3 million year in 2024 and 2025.

However, as expenses have increased over time, organizations such as the Alliance have had to use that line item simply to maintain the existence of rape crisis centers.

According to Gemar, these state rape crisis funds usually don’t complete our agencies. In reality, these are only steps to maintain facilities’ staffing levels and keep doors open.

The group’s 2023 annual report states that 90 cents of every dollar received by the organization goes toward survivor services, with the remaining 10 cents going toward administrative and development expenses.

Therefore, state funding is even more important for Gemar and the other advocates because of the uncertainty at the federal level.

According to Gemar, “a reduction in funding will significantly affect our capacity to deliver critical services that survivors depend on.” Any delay or uncertainty has an effect on a rather broad variety of services.

Domestic abuse advocacy organizations are not accustomed to requesting more funding.

According to Mary O. Doherty, executive director of the Ohio Domestic Violence Network, “we’re advocating for more funding every budget year, every year that the state deals with its operating budget.”

Funding for the network’s 76 member programs—58 of which are shelters—comes from the state attorney general’s office, some donations, and the Office of Violence Against Women. This completes the network’s annual budget of $10.6 million.

See also  Ohio domestic, sexual violence survivor advocates await federal funding answers, hope for state help

Although funding for the network member program has not been reduced, O Doherty stated that they are closely monitoring the situation.

Our initiatives depend on federal funds, therefore it would be disastrous, she said. Our organizations would be crippled by drastic cuts.

The network programs already suffered significant losses from the Victims of Crime Act in 2019, 2020, and 2021, which is another reason for the funding instability. O Doherty reported that more than $200,000 in funding was reduced from one of its biggest non-residential programs for domestic violence in 2019.

More than 127,000 survivors got housing, support groups, legal representation, transportation, and other resources, according to a Dec. 2024 report from the Ohio Domestic Violence Network. As part of their member services, 3,743 children and almost 9,700 survivors were sheltered. However, the report states that over 8,000 additional survivors were denied access because of inadequate capacity.

According to O Doherty, the majority of the funds that the domestic violence network receives are allocated to support staff, just like the sexual violence alliance. According to 82% of the member programs, the network was able to retain employees who could have been let go due to funding cuts in fiscal year 2024 by using monies from budget line-items for hiring and service capacity enhancements.

However, as O Doherty noted, Ohio’s financing for domestic abuse advocacy is insufficient when compared to neighboring states. Per-capita state support in Kentucky, Michigan, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Indiana was examined by the ODVN.

At $3.06 per person, Kentucky had the greatest spending, followed by Michigan at $2.39 per person. Indiana pays $1.31 per person, West Virginia spends $1.41 per person, and Pennsylvania spends $1.71 per capita.

See also  Ohio domestic, sexual violence survivor advocates await federal funding answers, hope for state help

According to reports, Ohio’s per capita spending was 85 cents.

DeWine suggested keeping the domestic violence programs line item at $20 million for the biennium, which is the same amount as was planned for 2025 but a small increase from prior years, in addition to the rape crisis center line item in his budget proposal. For the next two years, the recommended annual amount for a domestic violence shelter line item is $50,000, which is the same as in prior years.

In an effort to double the existing rate, O Doherty and other advocates are calling for a raise in the $10 million annual line item.

“We have been working to increase those funds,” O Doherty stated. Perhaps that will help us if the federal government’s funding appears dubious.

The Ohio House is currently in charge of the executive budget plan; before the Ohio Senate examines the state’s operational spending, the House will develop its own budget. Before producing a single document, the two chambers will first reconcile their drafts with the governor’s. By July 1, the governor must sign the budget.

OUR WORK IS MADE POSSIBLE BY YOU.

Leave a Comment