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Writing & Published Work
City Limits
November 26, 2007
ASK HOW THE PETS ARE DOING,
FAMILY COUNSELORS LEARN
Domestic violence service providers can better protect survivors
and families by building pet-related practices into their routines.
By Christina Alex, LMSW
Manhattan resident Tanya McLeod credits her beloved Labrador retriever
mix for saving her life more than a decade ago. McLeod, now 41, was
a battered young mother who thought about leaving her abusive husband,
but knew domestic violence shelters wouldn't take her beloved dog
and refused to leave Brownie behind.
Then her husband killed the family pet, and McLeod finally fled with her three
children, testifying in court to send him to prison and then divorcing him.
McLeod tells this story in a training video for service providers that debuted
earlier this month at a New York City Bar Association panel on the connection
between animal cruelty and domestic violence – a strong, often predictive link
that's becoming better known to the general public.
About 50 advocates, attorneys and animal lovers were transfixed by the experience
of McLeod, who works on domestic violence service system reform as part of the
Voices of Women Organizing Project. Back in the mid-90s when Tanya went to the
police, they wouldn’t take a report about a dog. But since 1999, it’s been a
felony to intentionally kill or seriously injure an animal with aggravated cruelty,
according to panelist Carol Moran, a Brooklyn deputy district attorney, who has
prosecuted animal cruelty cases for more than two decades. Nationwide data from
a pioneering researcher in the field, Frank R. Ascione, shows that 71 percent
of pet owners in domestic violence shelters reported that their pet had been
threatened, hurt or killed.
The video rough cut of McLeod’s testimony, interspersed with compelling statistics,
is the first product of a new project spearheaded by the family violence prevention
agency CONNECT, to find ways to protect both survivors of domestic violence and
their pets. It got rolling when CONNECT executive director Kala Ganesh approached
A Kinder World Foundation for funding to examine the link between domestic violence
and animal abuse, with the goal of creating collaborative model programs and
community education projects. The time was ripe, as New York became one of the
first states to adopt a law to include pets in orders of protection in July 2006.
With the grant, CONNECT hired two consultants
to develop a working group with the mission of examining barriers to safety for
victims and their pets across the city and then mitigating those obstacles. Animal-loving
social workers Susan Urban and Elaine Wolff, both with extensive city human services
experience, launched the Alliance for the Safety of Animals and People (ASAP)
eight months ago. It includes members from both governmental and nonprofit human
service and animal welfare agencies. The first hurdle to better serving domestic
violence survivors is that none of the city’s domestic violence emergency shelters
take animals, which contributes to some victims and their families choosing to
remain in unsafe situations.
On average, across NYC each day police respond to more than 600 domestic violence
incidents, and the city’s domestic violence hotline answers more than 340 calls
daily. Meanwhile, more than half of all New Yorkers own a pet, according to the
American Veterinary Medical Association.
ASAP is working with the city’s domestic violence hotline (1-800-621-HOPE)
to make sure that the questions asked of hotline callers include
whether they have, or had, a family pet. To further educate those
on the helping end of the conversation, CONNECT is also incorporating
lessons about the link between animal cruelty and family violence
into its core training, and ASAP is developing a curriculum for human
service professionals that includes training on assessments and how
people can keep both themselves and their companion animals safe.
Until now, the Mayor’s Alliance for Animals, a public-private partnership
of more than 100 animal rescue groups and shelters, has saved the
day when domestic violence victims have reached out for assistance
with their four-legged friends. Alliance president and panelist Jane
Hoffman recalled one survivor and her children who escaped into shelter,
leaving their miniature pinscher at home since the batterer was in
jail. They visited the dog every day. Then a domestic violence survivor
who worked at Min Pin Rescue contacted the Mayor’s Alliance, and
they were able to house Maggie for nine months at a vet's office,
a boarding facility and a foster home. Every weekend, the mom dressed
up her two children to take the dog for a walk in the park. When
the family found housing, Maggie was reunited with them.
“We need to recognize that pets are part of the family, and we need
public and government support to fund this – this is a real need
that makes a real difference for families in domestic violence situations," said
Hoffman, noting the average $20-per-day price tag for boarding these
animals.
In other jurisdictions, domestic violence shelters have partnered
with animal care and control agencies, animal shelters, veterinary
clinics and private boarding facilities to arrange for temporary
placement of pets, while a few shelters across the country have on-site
kennels. But in New York City, challenges to keeping pets with their
owners include the fact that many shelters have common shared areas,
like living rooms and kitchens, where other residents may not want
pets. Also, the limited stay (up to 135 days) in emergency shelter
can leave families without permanent housing, and who can't find
space in a transitional domestic violence shelter, resorting to the
homeless system which does not accept animals.
At the very least, deputy D.A. Moran suggests placing a pet with
a family member, boarding it with a local veterinarian for a few
weeks, or surrendering it to a local rescue group. “Leaving the pet
with the batterer can be dangerous because violence often escalates
when the victim and children leave the home and the batterer begins
to lose control of the family. The batterer may kill or injure the
pet to manipulate the family or out of raw anger or aggression. And
to break the hearts and will of the victim and children,” Moran says.
Victims also can make an advance safety plan for how to protect a
pet, similar to what advocates recommend for women, says panelist
Urban. This can include packing a bag of critical items to leave
in a safe place.
On a broader note, an audience member who works in a shelter stated
that the huge number of homeless people should take priority over
animals. She also pointed out that domestic violence survivors have
no shortage of stressors as they rebuild their lives, from being
the sole breadwinner to mental health issues, so that caring for
a pet can be challenging.
Despite the obstacles ahead, all seemed to agree that the benefits
of these friendly companions are priceless: “That mother said those
kids could keep their life together and stability because they could
see Maggie the dog on the weekend,” says Hoffman.
Christina Alex is a freelance writer and licensed master social worker who
has worked in the domestic violence field in Connecticut and New York City.
http://www.citylimits.org/content/articles/viewarticle.cfm?article_id=3452
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