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VAWA H OUSING P ROTECTIONS FOR V ICTIMS OF D OMESTIC V IOLENCE Vicki de Martinez Circle of Hope.

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Presentation on theme: "VAWA H OUSING P ROTECTIONS FOR V ICTIMS OF D OMESTIC V IOLENCE Vicki de Martinez Circle of Hope."— Presentation transcript:

1 VAWA H OUSING P ROTECTIONS FOR V ICTIMS OF D OMESTIC V IOLENCE Vicki de Martinez Circle of Hope

2 Learning Objectives Awareness of Dynamics of Domestic Violence Familiarity with VAWA Housing Protections Best Practices for Working with Survivors Local Resources for Survivors

3 Domestic Violence

4 It’s About Power and ControlIt’s About Power and Control 1 Violence is Just One Part of the AbuseViolence is Just One Part of the Abuse 2 It Affects Much More Than the VictimIt Affects Much More Than the Victim 3 An Overview

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6 Power & Control DV is a pattern of coercive power and control Both perpetrators and victims may use violence Survivors may have additional fears, beyond physical safety (ex. deportation; losing custody; criminal legal system)

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8 Types of Abuse Emotional Physical Sexual Economic

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10 Level of Violence Increases Over Time

11 Typically takes 7 to 10 times before success Leaving very often doesn’t stop the violence Increases danger level for victims with high lethality risk factors Leaving is a Process… Not an Event

12 Domestic Violence Affects All of Us Family & friends Employers Schools Social Services Criminal & Civil Justice Systems Healthcare

13 VAWA Housing Protections

14 VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN ACT (VAWA) Provides grants to law enforcement, courts, shelters, social service agencies, housing providers & government agencies providing services to DV victims Creates a national database for DV protection orders. Makes a DV protection order issued by a state, tribe or territory more easily enforceable by other states, tribes & territories Applies to male and female victims alike.

15 VAWA(Continued) Enacted in 1994,reauthorized 2000, 2005 and 2013 VAWA 2013 extends protections to  LGBT and immigrant victims  Victims of sexual assault  Victims on tribal land  Residents of additional subsidized housing programs

16 HOUSING & DOMESTIC VIOLENCE  Strong link between DV & homelessness.  Tenants are discriminated against, denied access to and evicted from housing because of status as DV victims  Victims who leave their abusers have trouble finding long-term housing, and often return to their abusers due to lack of affordable housing options.

17 COVERED HOUSING PROGRAMS UNDER VAWA Covered by VAWA 2005 Public Housing HCV Section 8 Project-Based Sec. 8 Section 202/811 Added by VAWA 2013 236 Multifamily 221(d)(3) BMIR HOME HOPWA McKinney Vento Act USDA/RD LIHTC

18 COVERED HOUSING PROGRAMS UNDER VAWA (continued) Applies to PHAs, owners and property managers. VAWA does not protect tenants in private market rate housing.

19 WHO DOES VAWA PROTECT? Victims of actual or threatened  Domestic Violence  Dating Violence  Sexual Assault (VAWA 2013)  Stalking “Affiliated Individual” of the victim (spouse, sibling, child of victim; individual to whom victim stands in loco parentis; person lawfully living in victim's household). VAWA 2013 extends coverage to LGBT & immigrant victims and victims on tribal lands

20 TO WHAT DOES VAWA APPLY? Admissions Evictions Subsidy terminations

21 ADMISSIONS PHAs, owners, and managers shall not deny an applicant housing on the basis that an applicant was victim of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault or stalking.

22 EVICTIONS & TERMINATIONS PHAs/owners/managers may not evict or terminate assistance for tenant on the basis that the tenant is a victim. Crimes against victim “directly relating to” the abuse are not grounds for evicting the victim or terminating her subsidy. An incident of actual or threatened domestic violence is not a “serious or repeated lease violation” or good cause for eviction of the victim or terminating the victim’s subsidy. Tenant protections do not apply to violations unrelated to DV.

23 EVICTIONS & TERMINATIONS EXCEPTIONS  PHAs and landlords can evict the victim if they can demonstrate an “actual and imminent threat” to other tenants or employees at the property if the victim is not evicted.  VAWA 2013 does not define “actual and imminent threat”.  Regulations for VAWA 2005 define “actual and imminent threat” as physical danger that is real, would occur within an immediate timeframe, and could result in death or serious bodily harm.

24 EVICTIONS & TERMINATIONS BIFURCATION  PHA, owner or manager may evict or terminate assistance to the abuser while allowing a victim who is a lawful occupant to remain. COMPLIANCE WITH COURT ORDERS  PHAs, owners and managers must comply with court orders regarding the rights or access to property or distribution, possession or control of property (including DV protection orders).

25 EVICTIONS & TERMINATIONS REMAINING HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS  If the individual who is evicted is the sole tenant eligible to receive housing assistance, PHA, owner or manager must give any remaining tenant an opportunity to establish eligibility for that program or a reasonable time to move or establish eligibility for another covered housing program.

26 PORTABILITY PHA may permit section 8 family to port out if family has complied with all obligations of program and is moving to protect health and safety of a victim. Portability is permitted in this situation even if lease term has not expired.

27 CERTIFICATION Where applicant/tenant claims protection under VAWA, PHA, owner or manager may, but is not required to, request in writing that tenant/applicant provide documentation. Tenant/applicant must provide documentation within 14 business days after written request but PHA/owner/manager has discretion to extend deadline.

28 CERTIFICATION Form of documentation: – HUD/USDA/Dept of Treas.-approved form stating (1) applicant or tenant is victim, (2) incident meets VAWA requirements, and (3) name of abuser, if known and safe to provide; OR – Statement signed under penalty of perjury by victim service provider, attorney, medical or mental health professional that he/she believes incident meets VAWA requirements AND signed by tenant/applicant; OR – Record of federal, state, territorial, tribal or local law enforcement agency, court or administrative agency; OR – Statement or other evidence at discretion of PHA/owner/manager.

29 CERTIFICATION Where there are conflicting certifications, PHA/owner/manager may require applicant or tenant or submit additional third-party documentation.

30 EMERGENCY TRANSFERS Applicable federal agency must adopt model emergency transfer plan for use by PHAs, owners and managers. Transfer to available and safe dwelling unit under a covered housing program if (1) requested by tenant and (2) (a) tenant reasonably believes she is threatened with imminent harm from further violence if she stays or (b) tenant is victim of sexual assault that occurred in premises within prior 90 days. Plan must include confidentiality measures.

31 CONFIDENTIALITY PHA, owner, manager must keep confidential the certification information provided by victim. Information cannot be entered in a shared database or disclosed to others unless – Consented to by victim, – Required for use in eviction proceeding, or – Otherwise required by law Employees of PHA, owner or manager are prohibited from accessing info unless specifically authorized to do so because it is necessary for their work.

32 NOTICES & LANGUAGE ACCESS Agencies must develop a notice of VAWA housing rights for applicants and tenants. PHAs, owners and managers must give the notice and the agency-approved self-certification form to applicants and tenants at 3 junctures: – Time of denial of admission, – Time of admission, and – With any notice of termination or eviction. Notice must be available in multiple languages and be consistent with HUD guidance.

33 B EST P RACTICES

34 Prioritize Best Practices Confidentiality Safety Working With Survivors Support

35 Best Practices Listen without judgement Affirm their fears and feelings Maintain confidentiality Discuss potential safety issues Collaborate with local DV agency Refer victim for services

36 Case Study Jennifer – Her story – Mistakes made – Successes achieved – The moral of the story

37 Local Resources

38 Circle of Hope

39 24 Hour Crisis Line 1-800-33-HAVEN Safe, temporary shelter Support Groups Legal Advocacy Transitional & Supportive Housing Programs Non-Residential Services Counseling Financial Assistance Children’s Program Bilingual Program School Prevention Program Volunteer Program Thrift Store All services are free and confidential

40 24-Hour Hotlines Statewide 800-33HAVEN Local 706-776-HOPE

41 Q UESTIONS ?


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