Saturday

CHEERS AND JEERS OF THE WEEK


New Shelter for Deaf;

Psych Patients Raped
(this time it got reported)




(WOMENSENEWS)--

Cheers

Seattle on Monday became the first city in the country to begin building apartments specifically designed to support deaf and deaf-blind women overcoming domestic violence, reported the Seattle Post Intelligencer.

The effort started 19 years ago when Marilyn Smith, a therapist, founded Abused Deaf Women's Advocacy Services after a man killed his deaf wife during a domestic dispute in Seattle. The victim had tried to seek help, but service providers repeatedly turned her away because they were unable to understand or meet her needs.

"The police will talk to the hearing person first," said Lisa Vosburg-Buhl, a deaf victim of abuse, told the Seattle Post Intelligencer through an interpreter. "They think we aren't educated or smart enough, or that we can't communicate, can't understand the legal system."

Often emergency responders grab a deaf woman's hand to calm her down if she is frantic, which limits her ability to communicate, according to the report. Sometimes police arriving at the scene of a domestic dispute will take a statement from the abusive boyfriend or husband and not from the victim because they can't communicate with her, Vosburg-Buhl said.

Sixty-four percent of the $7.7 million project, which will provide 19 apartments of affordable housing to residents comes from state funds.

Other Reasons to Cheer:

--Gov. Rod Blagojevich issued an emergency rule on Friday requiring pharmacies in Illinois to fill prescriptions for contraceptives without delay, according to a press release on Blagojevich's Web site. The move follows a recent complaint filed against an Illinois pharmacy that refused to fill a prescription for birth control. There have been numerous reports of similar refusals in more than a dozen states, including Illinois, at major drugstores such as Walgreens, Osco, K-Mart, CVS, and Eckerd as well as independently owned pharmacies.

--The U.S. Supreme Court rejected an appeal Monday to reinstate an Idaho law requiring minors to get parental consent for abortions, reported The Associated Press. The justices let stand without comment the July 2004 Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision, which declared the parental consent law unconstitutional. The lower court found the law's restrictions to be too narrow, ruling that there was no reasonable explanation for restricting emergency abortions to sudden and unexpected physical complications.

-- Rebecca Simmons was appointed judge Friday to the San Antonio-based 4th Court of Appeals in Texas, which will create the only all-female court in that state, reported the Houston Chronicle's Web site. Gov. Rick Perry announced her selection on Thursday for the seven-judge appellate court. The appointment, however, will not become official until the Texas Senate confirms it. Simmons' term would end with the next general election in November 2006, when she can opt to run for a full term.

--First lady Laura Bush visited Afghanistan Wednesday for the first time. In her visit, she emphasized U.S. support for education for women and girls. She announced $21 million in education grants, which will include building an American University and International School of Afghanistan, a secondary-level school. The visit included a meeting with President Hamid Karzai and the first lady of Afghanistan, Dr. Zeenat Karzai, who requested specific aid for building gynecological services for women in Afghanistan. The country has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world, estimated at 1,600 per 100,000 live births, according to research conducted in 2002 by UNICEF and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


Jeers

More than 100 women were sexually abused or assaulted while patients at three state-run mental health hospitals in Nebraska from 2000 to 2004, an Omaha attorney claimed, reported the Omaha World-Herald on Wednesday.

Lawyer Bruce G. Mason, litigation director for Nebraska Advocacy Services, submitted a request for a lawsuit against the state to be converted to a class-action lawsuit on behalf of "all women who are subjected to rape, sexual assault, sexual harassment, sexual exploitation and physical assault."

The pending litigation is an outgrowth of claims by former Lincoln Regional Center patients that an employee assaulted them in 2001. It is also related to a 1995 federal lawsuit by four women who claimed male patients raped them at the Hastings Regional Center.

The 2001 Hastings case was settled and part of the settlement required the state to provide better supervision and trauma therapy for the victims. The pending lawsuit claims the state did not provide fulfill these requirements.

"It's certainly not a place where you want your mother, daughter, sister or girlfriend," Mason said.

Other Reasons to Jeer:

--Incarcerated mothers need services to improve their connectivity with family members, especially their children, according to a University of Massachusetts-Boston study reported on NewsRx.com today. The study found that in 2003 approximately 9,000 women served sentences in Massachusetts prisons and jails and about 6,900 of them were mothers to 16,000 children. Depending on the prison, some incarcerated mothers are unable to touch their child during a visit or the mothers are unable to visit with their whole family at once because the visiting room may be too small to accommodate the entire family.

--Oxfam International, a leading aid organization, reported that three times as many women were killed on average than men in some of the tsunami-hit areas in India, Indonesia and Sri Lanka, reported The Associated Press on Monday. In an Indonesian village hit by the tsunami, men now outnumber women by 10 to one. The policy director of Oxfam International, Becky Buel, said that "the tsunami has dealt a crushing blow to women and men across the region. In some villages it now appears that up to 80 percent of those killed were women."


Rasha Elass is an intern at Women's eNews and a freelance writer based in New York. She attends Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

________________________________________________________________
For any comments about this and any other story, please send a letter to the editors at http://pub.alxnet.com/guestbook?id=2014438

Copyright 2004 Women's eNews.

No comments: