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Section 25
Double
Jeopardy: Victims of Domestic
Violence Face Twice the Abuse
Question
25 found at the bottom of this page
Answer
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Mary worked as a counselor for people living with autism. She loved
her job, got along well with her supervisor, and was considered reliable. Things
began to change, however, when she attempted to end a relationship and her partner
beat her so badly that she was hospitalized. A year after the breakup, Mary's
ex-partner repeatedly threatened to kill her, harassed her, and stalked her while
she pursued prosecution for the assault.
Terrified, she obtained
a civil protection order against her ex-partner and had it renewed several times.
As a result of this continual harassment, Mary often had difficulty sleeping at
night, anxiety-ridden and fearful of how her ex-partner might harm her. Continuing
to work in spite of her ex-partner's crusade to destroy her life, Mary obtained
judicial restraining orders and attended domestic violence counseling without
missing more than four days of work.
Unfortunately, her valiant
efforts to keep her job were thwarted when Mary missed a last day of work. Her
ex-partner had come to her home over the weekend armed with a gun and threatened
to kill her. She called the police and fled to another city to stay with a friend.
On Monday, when she was leaving her friend's home on her way to work, she saw
her ex-partner waiting for her outside. Fearful that her ex-partner might attack
her again, Mary returned to her friend's house and notified the police. Her employer
fired her two days later, citing her poor attendance record.
As
if losing her job weren't bad enough, when Mary applied for unemployment compensation,
her employer challenged her entitlement, stating that she was fired for misconduct.
In fact, the Employment Development Department initially denied her benefits.
On appeal, Mary prevailed after explaining how her fear for her safety prevented
her from leaving her friend's home and caused her to be absent from work. Mary's
employer has appealed this decision, however, and she continues to fight for her
benefits.
Mary's story exemplifies the issues confronting
many victims of domestic violence who continue to work out of economic necessity
in the face of life-threatening situations. Although Mary lost a job that she
loved, she was more fortunate than most domestic violence victims in her situation.
She was able to get restraining orders against her batterer, attend counseling,
and eventually obtain unemployment compensation that enabled her to continue to
look for a job without losing her home or succumbing to welfare.
It
is often necessary for victims of domestic violence to take time from
work to address the violence in their lives, and when they do, they are frequently
victimized yet again when they are fired, forced to quit their jobs, or fail to
complete job training programs. While domestic violence victims sometimes are
fired because of poor attendance or declining performance, in all too many cases,
they are fired simply because their employer determines that it cannot have a
domestic violence victim in the workplace.
Faced with the
risk of jeopardizing their economic security, many victims forgo legal assistance
or stay with the batterer in order to keep their jobs. As battering tends to escalate
at the time of separation and victims fear that the batterer may stalk them at
work, they choose to remain in dangerous relationships, rather than risk having
their batterer find them at work and subsequently face termination.
There
are few express employment rights available to victims who are faced
with the threat of losing their job when they take affirmative steps to leave
their domestic violence situations. Compounding this problem is the fact that
most victims of domestic violence are unaware of the employment rights they do
have under such laws as the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), the Americans
with Disabilities Act (ADA), and other state and federal laws that may provide
them with job protected unpaid leave, job accommodations or unemployment compensation.
This situation heightens the need for legislative and policy initiatives to address
gaps in existing law to increase employment protections and for advocacy to increase
awareness of existing employment protections among domestic violence victims.
The epidemic of domestic violence in American
society is well documented. Two to four million American women are physically
abused by their boyfriends or husbands each year. Although the majority of studies
and statistics about domestic violence are based on women in heterosexual relationships,
domestic violence is as prevalent in same sex relationships.
Efforts
to assist domestic violence victims include greater civil and criminal protections
and increased funding for battered women's programs such as shelters. The goal
is to prevent domestic violence and to help people escape these violent situations
by recognizing that domestic violence is a crime, and by punishing batterers.
Unfortunately, increased funding and legislative efforts have been unable to adequately
address the powerful economic barriers that prevent many domestic violence victims
from escaping violent relationships.
Domestic violence
and the injuries that flow from the abuse necessarily affect job performance.
The fear of losing her job if she takes the time from work to get legal or medical
assistance deters many victims from leaving violent relationships. Recent studies
have documented the impact of domestic violence on employment. In a 1992 study
by Domestic Violence Intervention Services, Inc., Tulsa, Okla., 96 percent of
employed victims of domestic violence surveyed experienced some type of work-related
problem. A 1996 report by the New York State Department of Labor found that 74
percent of domestic violence victims were harassed by their abusive partners at
work. In another study, one-quarter of victims surveyed said that they had lost
their jobs at least in part due to domestic violence.
The
dire need for advocacy to increase employment protections for domestic violence
victims is even more compelling when we consider that welfare reform requires
welfare recipients to work for their benefits. It has been estimated that more
than 50 percent of female welfare recipients have been victims of domestic violence.
Analyzing these statistics and translating them into specific
examples of workplace problems suffered by domestic violence victims clarifies
the need for increased employment protections. A victim of domestic violence often
requires medical attention and counseling for physical or psychological injuries
caused by battering. Obtaining a restraining order often necessitates time off
from work to appear in court during work hours. In addition, a victim may be harassed
or attacked by her batterer at her job and consequently be forced to quit her
job for her own safety or the safety of others at work, or she may simply be fired.
Domestic violence victims do have limited recourse
under existing law, however. An employee who needs time off from work
to seek medical attention for a serious health condition resulting from domestic
violence suffered by her or her children may be entitled to job-protected leave
under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et
seq. (1997). A victim of domestic violence may experience many forms of physical
and emotional abuse that result in serious health conditions requiring medical
attention. Even a single act of violence by a family member may cause long-lasting
trauma as well as immediate harm to a victim or an observer. Repeated abuse and
severe violence causes significant psychological distress and may result in post-traumatic
stress disorder, depression, dissociative anxiety or mood disorders that may qualify
as serious health conditions under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act.
If an employer is covered under FMLA, it may not discharge a survivor of
domestic violence who is an eligible employee for taking up to 12 weeks of leave
to care for her own serious health condition or that of her child due to domestic
violence. (29 U.S.C. § 2614(a)). An eligible employee who is entitled to
take leave must be employed for at least 12-months by the employer and for at
least 1,250 hours of service during the previous 12-month period. (29 U.S.C. 11(2)(A)).
Yet, the FMLA does not address the needs of many domestic
violence victims who are trying to keep their jobs. The FMLA does not provide
for job-protected leave to attend a civil protection order hearing or to make
other arrangements to leave a batterer. It does not prohibit an employer from
firing a victim of domestic violence because of her status as a victim. While
a few states like Maine (Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 26, §1193) have interpreted
their unemployment laws to permit domestic violence victims who are forced to
leave their jobs due to circumstances involving domestic violence to qualify for
unemployment compensation benefits, this is a question open to interpretation
on a state-by-state basis. Legislation is currently pending in California that
would expressly provide for unemployment compensation benefits for domestic violence
victims forced to leave employment because of domestic violence situations. (S.B.
165 (Cal. 1997)).
Recognizing the limited options available for domestic violence
victims, advocates are working to enact federal and state legislation that would
afford victims of domestic violence leave from work to seek legal assistance,
counseling, or to terminate the relationship without fear of losing their jobs.
One example of legislation that would increase employment protections
for victims of domestic violence is the Battered Women's Employment Protection
Act (BWEPA) that is currently pending in Congress. (S. 367, 105th Cong. 1st Sess.
(1997)). On February 26, 1997, Senator Wellstone introduced BWEPA as an amendment
to FMLA to provide job-protected unpaid leave to victims of domestic violence
so that they could obtain legal representation, counseling or assistance with
safety planning. It would also expressly provide for unemployment insurance for
those victims of domestic violence who are forced to leave their employment as
a result of domestic violence.
Certainly, BWEPA would have
been invaluable to Mary. If she had had the option of taking job-protected leave
from work to get a restraining order or counseling, she may not have missed those
four days of work and perhaps would have avoided termination. If she was fired
while on leave provided by BWEPA, she could file an action against her employer
for reinstatement. These are just two examples of how BWEPA could help domestic
violence victims take steps toward leaving violent relationships and prevent domestic
violence by providing victims with job-protected unpaid leave.
Many
domestic violence victims are often fired when their employer learns about
their violent situation through physical injuries, gossip in the office, or harassment
by the batterer in the workplace. Advocates are also working to address another
gap in employment protections for victims of domestic violence by creating a right
of action for victims who are terminated just because of their status as victims.
The Victims' Employment Rights Act (VERA) is one of several proposals to be included
in the second Violence Against Women Act addressing women's continued employment
and economic security in the face of violence. VERA would prohibit employers from
taking or threatening to take adverse job actions, including demotions or suspensions,
dismissals, involuntary transfers or from imposing any other losses of pay or
benefits against an employee based on her status, experience, or condition as
a crime victim. This law would have provided Mary with the opportunity to fight
for a job that she loved by suing for reinstatement after her termination for
missing work because of her domestic violence situation.
- Runge, Robin, Individual
Rights and Responsibilities, American Bar Association: Washington DC, 2002.
=================================
Personal
Reflection Exercise #11
The preceding section contained information
about domestic violence victims facing the risk of jeopardizing their economic
security. Write three case study examples regarding how you might use the content
of this section in your practice.
QUESTION
25
How many women are physically abused by their boyfriends or husbands
each year? Record the letter of the correct answer the Answer
Booklet.
Answer
Booklet for this
course
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