Breaking the cycle of family and sexual violence
Rt Hon Jacinda Ardern
Prime Minister
Jan
Logie
Parliamentary
Under-Secretary
EMBARGOED UNTIL 10AM
Breaking the cycle of family and sexual violence
Breaking the cycle of family and sexual violence and better supporting survivors is a major feature of the Wellbeing Budget, with the Government delivering the largest ever investment in family and sexual violence and support services.
The budget package will deliver more support services delivered to more New Zealanders, major campaigns aimed at stopping violence occurring and major changes to court process to reduce the trauma victims experience.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Parliamentary Under-Secretary Jan Logie today announced a new and collaborative approach to tackling one of the country’s most disturbing long-term challenges.
“There has never before been investment of this scale in preventing and responding to family violence and sexual violence,” Jacinda Ardern said.
“Every year about one million New Zealanders are affected by family and sexual violence, including almost 300,000 children. This is something I know New Zealand is ashamed of and the Government is taking a major step forward in fixing on the budget.
“Wellbeing means being safe and free from violence. That is why this package is such a significant cornerstone of the Wellbeing budget.
“My goal has always been for New Zealand to be the best place in the world to be a child and that means supporting parents and communities to ensure children grow up in secure homes free from violence,” Jacinda Ardern said.
The family and sexual violence package, which sits across eight portfolios, is the result of the first ever joint Budget bid from multiple government departments. It includes funding and support for:
• 1 million New
Zealanders covered by Integrated Safety Response sites
(Christchurch and Waikato), and 350,000 by the WhāngaiaNgā
Pā Harakeke and Whiria Te Muka sites (in Gisborne, Counties
Manukau and Kaitaia)
• 24/7 sexual violence
crisis support services for up to 2,800 children and young
people every year, and an additional 7,700 adult victims and
survivors from 2020/21
• Funding for major
advertising campaigns and intervention programmes to reduce
violence occurring
• Using video victim
statements to reduce trauma for up to 30,000 victims of
family violence every year, and reduce time spent in
court,
• Enabling victims of sexual violence to
give evidence in court in alternative ways in order to
reduce the risk of experiencing further trauma, and
providing specialist training for lawyers in sexual violence
cases
• specialist training for lawyers in
sexual violence cases
• improving the wellbeing
of male victims and survivors of sexual violence through
peer support services – up to 1,760 from 2020/21
onwards
• dedicated funding for a kaupapa Māori
response to sexual violence
• training for health
practitioners in District Health Boards to provide effective
screening and referrals for family violence
“We know
this is a long-term project. The package we’re announcing
today lays the foundations for a violence-free Aotearoa New
Zealand,” Jan Logie, Under-Secretary to the Minister of
Justice (Domestic and Sexual Violence Issues) said.
“The package announced today gives providers funding security, while making available significant extra resource to break the cycle of violence and provide more women, men and children the help they need.
“I want to acknowledge and thank Ministers Andrew Little, Carmel Sepuloni, Tracey Martin, Nanaia Mahuta, Chris Hipkins, Stuart Nash, Kelvin Davis, Iain Lees-Galloway, and Jenny Salesa for their support and commitment to this work,” Jan Logie said.
Notes to editors
The Wellbeing
Budget 2019 family violence and sexual violence package
comprises initiatives across five areas:
•
Preventing family violence and sexual violence [$47.8
million over 4 years]
• Safe, consistent and
effective responses to family violence in every community
[$84.3 million over 4 years]
• Expanding
essential specialist sexual violence services: moving
towards fully funding services [$131.1 million over 4
years]
• Reforming the criminal justice system to
better respond to victims of sexual violence. [$37.8 million
over 4 years]
• Strengthening system leadership
and supporting new ways of working [$20.0 million over 4
years]
• The total monetary value of the package
is $320 million (comprising new operating funding of $311.4
million, and $9.5 million of capital funding).
This will be delivered across eight portfolios: Attorney General, Corrections, Courts, Health, Justice, Oranga Tamariki, Police, and Social Development.