DASH Presents at 2009 National Forum on the Human Right to Housing

November 10, 2009

DASH Public Policy Director, Larisa Kofman, J.D., was a featured panelist/presenter at the 2009 National Forum on the Human Right to Housing, facilitating a workshop entitled “Domestic Violence and the Gender Component to the Human Right to Housing.”

Georgetown Law Center hosted this year’s forum on Sunday, November 8 and Monday, November 9, at the Gewirz Student Center, located on the Georgetown Law Center campus at 120 F Street, NW, Washington, D.C. More than a dozen leading national and local organizations presented at the forum, which was attended by advocates and practitioners from around the country. The event was sponsored by the Georgetown Law Human Rights Institute and the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty.

A complete workshop agenda is available at the Georgetown Law Center website:
http://www.law.georgetown.edu/news/releases/November.8.2009.html

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The Art of Giving: M.O.I., Inc. and Local Artists Raise Funds for DASH

November 12, 2009

The Art of Giving: M.O.I., Inc. and Local Artists Raise Funds for DASH

On November 5, local artists showcased and sold their works in support of DASH, raising nearly $1,000 for our programs and services. The MOI Art Show show was hosted and presented by M.O.I., Inc. at the Knoll Showroom in downtown D.C.

Original works of art, including painting, sculpture, photography, jewelry and ceramics were sold, and artists generously contributed a portion of their sales to benefit DASH.

Very special thanks to Carolyn Franco, everyone at M.O.I., Inc., the artists participating in the Art Show, Knoll Furniture, Blue Fusion Environments, and the guests and patrons who all made this event a wonderful show, as well as a great fundraiser for DASH. Thank you!

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A Real Dash for DASH: Marine Corps Marathon Runners Raise Cash for DASH

October 31, 2009

A Real Dash for DASH: Marine Corps Marathon Runners Raise Cash for DASH

The running of the Marine Corps Marathon on October 25 was a very special occasion for DASH. For months, two of our supporters, Bella and Caroline, raised awareness and support for DASH in conjunction with their Marathon training. They led a real life “Dash for DASH” in the weeks leading up to the Marathon!

Bella and Caroline connected DASH with dozens of new friends and supporters at “friend-raisers” they hosted. Their Marathon for DASH activities raised more than $1,000 to support our housing programs and services. We deeply appreciate Bella and Caroline’s commitment and support. Thank you!

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Pumpkins and Turkeys and Walking, Oh My! Amidon-Bowen School Teams Up with DASH to Help the Homeless

October 27, 2009

Pumpkins and Turkeys and Walking, Oh My!
Amidon-Bowen Elementary School Teams Up with DASH to Help the Homeless

Southwest, DC — Amidon-Bowen Elementary School in Southwest Washington partnered with DASH in support of this year’s Fannie Mae Help the Homeless Walkathon. The school is hosting a “Pumpkin Dash” and “Turkey Dash” mini walk, as well as a poster contest to raise awareness about homelessness in our city.

Kindergarten through sixth grade classes will participate in activities in October and November. Students who walk in the mini walks held at the school may also participate in the November 21st Walkathon with their parents.

We extend our thanks to the wonderful faculty and staff at Amidon-Bowen Elementary School for their support and commitment to help make DASH’s first year in the Walkathon a success. Very special thanks to Ms. Gloria Tobe for her tireless efforts coordinating all of the activities at the school, and to Principal Almita Hawkins for her enthusiastic support!

Thank you!

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DASH partners with Blue Fusion Environments: Local entrepreneur pledges support for our work

DASH NEWS RELEASE : October 3, 2009

DASH partners with Blue Fusion Environments:
Local entrepreneur pledges support for our work

Washington, DC— District resident and Blue Fusion Environments founder, Dennis Zirkle, announced a commitment to fund DASH’s work with a portion of revenues earned by the company.

Zirkle’s Blue Fusion Enviornments is a District of Columbia Department of Small and Local Business Development-Certified Business Enterprise program. Beginning October 1, 2009, Blue Fusion Environments will donate a portion of its proceeds earned through this program to help support local charities helping and improving the lives of those in our community who are in need.

DASH is honored and excited to partner with Blue Fusion Environments. “The company’s commitment to charitable giving is much more than giving back to the community—it’s giving forward. Support from Blue Fusion Environments will help DASH provide innovative safe housing where women and children live free from violence,” said Peg Hacskaylo, executive director and founder of DASH.

Founded in 2006, DASH provides safe housing, housing resources and information, as well as training and technical assistance to community agencies and victim service programs to increase the availability of safe, affordable housing options for women and their families. DASH serves dozens of local organizations and assists more than 1,000 local residents annually. For more information, visit www.dashdc.org.

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DASH Executive Director Attends Vice President Biden’s VAWA Anniversary Reception

DASH NEWS RELEASE : October 1, 2009



DASH Executive Director Attends Vice President Biden’s
VAWA Anniversary Reception

Washington, DC— DASH’s executive director Peg Hacskaylo attended a reception hosted by Vice President Joseph Biden at his Washington, D.C. residence. The celebration marked the 15th anniversary of the passage of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA)
.

Founded in 2006, DASH provides safe housing, housing resources and information, as well as training and technical assistance to community agencies and victim service programs to increase the availability of safe, affordable housing options for women and their families. DASH serves dozens of local organizations and assists more than 1,000 local residents annually. For more information, visit www.dashdc.org.

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DASH hosts staff from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

DASH NEWS RELEASE : September 29, 2009

DASH hosts staff from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services


Washington, DC— District Alliance for Safe Housing (DASH) hosted a site visit for staff from the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families. Eight staff members of various programs, including programs to address family violence and human trafficking, met with DASH staff to discuss strategies employed by our innovative safe housing programs, and to exchange information about safe housing trends and promising practices emerging nationally.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Administration for Children and Families (ACF) is a federal agency funding state, territory, local, and tribal organizations to provide family assistance (welfare), child support, child care, Head Start, child welfare, and other programs relating to children and families.

Founded in 2006, DASH provides safe housing, housing resources and information, as well as training and technical assistance to community agencies and victim service programs to increase the availability of safe, affordable housing options for women and their families. DASH serves dozens of local organizations and assists more than 1,000 local residents annually. For more information, visit www.dashdc.org.

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DASH is in the HuffPost!

DASH NEWS RELEASE : August 14, 2009


Excerpted from RJ Eskow’s August 13, 2009 article posted to The Huffington Post:

Domestic violence is a health policy issue. It adds to the cost of medical care while harming the public’s health. Meaningful statistics are hard to come by — which of itself reflects society’s neglect of the topic — but I recently received a compilation of domestic violence statistics from DASH, the District Alliance for Safe Housing in Washington DC, where my daughter was a law clerk this summer.

In the District of Columbia alone, with less than 600,000 inhabitants, the Police Department received 31,215 “domestic-related crime calls.” That’s one call every nineteen minutes, as DASH notes. Most of these incidents (this site [http://www.aidv-usa.com/statistics.htm] estimates 85-95%) involve violence against women.

The last meaningful federal survey took place in 2000, at the end of the Clinton administration. A Department of Justice survey on the “Extent, Nature, and Consequences of Intimate Partner Violence” found that nearly 25% of surveyed women said they had been raped and/or physically assaulted by a current or former spouse, partner, or date. That equates to roughly 4.8 million violent attacks against women annually in this country. And many women were the victim of repeat attacks (an average of 6.9 assaults by the same partner).

The study also found that “approximately one-fifth of all rapes, one-quarter of all physical assaults, and one-half of all stalkings” experienced by women will not be reported to the police. That makes DASH’s police figures even more staggering.

It’s curious how blind we become to our own culture. We can criticize tribal Muslim societies for their abuse of women, yet fail to see how ours sometimes does the same thing. What can we do? We can support organizations like DASH, which provides alternate housing for victims of domestic violence. We can press for public policies that address domestic violence. We can speak out against the culture of violence — a culture that’s strengthened every time a women is treated like an object.
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The entire article is available at:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rj-eskow/ending-the-culture-of-vio_b_259153.html

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DASH Testifies at Public Oversight Hearing

DASH NEWS RELEASE : July 31, 2009

PUBLIC OVERSIGHT HEARING
BY THE COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE ON
THE FISCAL YEAR 2009 AND FISCAL YEAR 2010 BUDGET
GAP-CLOSING STRATEGIES

July 24, 2009

Testimony of
Peg Hacskaylo, MSW
Executive Director
District Alliance for Safe Housing, Inc.

Thank you for the opportunity to testify today regarding the Fiscal Year 2009 and 2010 Budget. I am Peg Hacskaylo, Executive Director of the District Alliance for Safe Housing (DASH). DASH is deeply concerned about the cuts in the Mayor’s proposal to different programs serving domestic violence victims and their children. DASH’s plea today focuses on the cuts facing the Office of Victims Services (OVS), for funding that impact your constituents, primarily women and children, facing circumstances that are so terrifying, some have called it the equivalent of war in the home – we know it as domestic violence.

The current cuts facing OVS total $340,000. These cuts will leave victims and children with few or no options for help, safety or support. The District has less than 10 organizations dedicated to domestic violence victims, the majority with fewer than 5 staff. These organizations are barely surviving in this economy, many having laid off staff; cut salaries for employees already living a non-profit lifestyle – often paycheck to paycheck; cut programs and services; or stopped serving new clients because the capacity does not exist. Each organization meets specific needs like housing, legal services, case management, and court based advocacy. Many organizations serve special populations, such as immigrant, teens, and disabled victims. The OVS cuts will devastate our community and the victims we serve.

DASH is the direct result of your dedication and commitment to victims and their children, specifically to victims and children in need of safe housing. We are also the result of OVS’s commitment to ensuring that your vision for increasing safe housing comes to life. DASH’s housing projects are the first large-scale housing projects for victims in the District in over twenty years. We must have the District’s continued funding commitment to sustain housing programs and provide safe housing options for the District’s residents. While housing is a critical component to an effective coordinated community response to domestic violence, so too are the core services needed to address the devastating legal, economic and emotional impact of domestic violence on victims and their children. When victims access DASH’s low-barrier safe housing programs they will have found physical safety, but DASH advocates and the victims we serve need to rely on a large and strong network of organizations to support each family in addressing a multitude of issues.

In recent months, homicides related to domestic violence have received significant media attention — husbands killing their wives and children, boyfriends killing girlfriends — countless innocent lives have been lost. The media has put the spotlight on domestic violence and the impact of the economy. Today I want us to consider the fact that domestic violence existed prior to the economic downturn. I want us to think about how the tragic impact of this economy will be the elimination or depletion of services to victims and their children. Cutting funds to OVS will directly result in that. Yes, during these economic times many victims fear leaving their batterers because they may have lost their jobs and have no financial resources or they may have no place to go because the homeless shelters are at capacity and safe housing options are still limited. However, that does not mean attempts to find safety will not be made. The same victims who fear leaving their batterers may still make that call for help to a hotline, or one of the local domestic violence programs, or DASH and we must be here to support them. The District cannot take away any more life lines.

Your efforts to sustain the levels of funding to OVS in recent years has directly resulted in lives being saved and families finding the help they need. This is not the time to consider cutting funds to the organizations in the District providing services and support to victims—often serving as the only lifeline they have.

I know you face challenging decisions and all of the cuts you are considering will impact underserved populations, but my plea today is for you to spare OVS, for the sake of the victims and children who are still able to get services from District providers.
Survivors Voices:

It is always challenging for victims in safe housing to speak publicly about their experience due to safety concerns. However, there are many stories and experiences to share. The following stories come directly from victims served by DASH:

“DASH gave me a home! A place for my son and I to feel safe and cared for. I consider them one of my many blessings”

“I really appreciate the opportunity I was given for me and my family to start over. CVC and DASH has been a big help and really gave me everything I needed to gain my independence back. I am so thankful for this program. Everyone has been extremely helpful during this extreme time of need. In the last 4 months, I have felt safer here than I have in years. Thank you so much for this program, and the staff you have running this program. My advocate as well as the rest of the DASH team, they have made this transition for me and my family go as smooth, safe, and comfortable as they possibly could. I am ready to go on my own, and start my life over with me and my 4 kids….”

“…The DASH program is helping me rebuild my life for my children and for myself. There are not any other programs like DASH. I entered the program with a 3 week old son and two other children, and I don’t know what I would have done without DASH….”

“I was pregnant when I was assaulted by the father of my son. I was assisted by Crime Victims and placed at a hotel. I gave birth to my son. This program has been a blessing for myself and my three children. It has enabled me to feel safe, supported, and at peace. Since entering the DASH program I have been able to get myself mentally organized, and regain my strength. I am very hopeful for me and my kid’s futures; I have not had to depend on others which is a blessing. My 16 year old and 17 year old are happy to be here as well. My goal while in the program is to find housing, transitional or find an apartment, and to find employment. Since I have been here I have gotten a lot done for my baby boy such as getting birth certificates, social security card, finding daycare very close to where we are, finding pediatrician and just getting to know my newborn without drama from others.”

“First of all I want to say thank you all of the program staff. God bless you and your life, family. We need to be stay here because we got some place, helping to find school, food, money for transport….thank you for giving us this chance and God bless this program.”

Overview of Domestic Violence in the District of Columbia:

In 2008, the Metropolitan Police Department received 31,215 domestic violence-related calls—one call every 19 minutes. In 2008, during one 24-hour period, 167 victims were served by domestic violence organizations in the District, and 134 victims were either in emergency or transitional housing, including hotels, or were provided assistance with finding safe housing. Local hotlines receive approximately 300 calls weekly from victims seeking housing.

District of Columbia Council Funding Appropriations Directly Impacts Victims of Domestic Violence Victims and Children Seeking Safe Housing:

Until March 2009, the District only had 48 emergency beds for victims and their children. This changed as a result of District leadership committed to the safety of victims and their children. As a result of this commitment and the funding appropriations directed toward safe housing programs, DASH launched our emergency safe housing program, Huruma Place I and II, more than doubling emergency safe housing for victims and children. In just four months, we have provided safe housing to twenty-two victims and forty-four children. In fact, Huruma Place is a direct result of the FY09 local safe housing funding appropriation that was saved just a few months ago due to the leadership and commitment of city leaders, advocates and District residents to ensuring that the city follows through on its dedication of funds to increase and sustain safe housing.

The Council has shown its ongoing commitment by ensuring that adequate local funds have been appropriated for safe housing each fiscal year since 2007. Due to this funding commitment DASH will more than triple safe housing for victims in FY 2009 and FY2010.

OVS has demonstrated its commitment to both sustaining and creating safe housing by ensuring that funding is appropriated to local shelter and safe housing programs. Through OVS’s support of DASH’s programs and activities, and through their vision and leadership, OVS has gained broad community investment in their plan for expanding and sustaining domestic violence housing.

In addition to Huruma Place, DASH has been able to create and sustain several programs that directly address the housing needs of victims and their children. We provide a scattered site transitional housing program, and through our Housing Resource Center we work directly with victims and caseworkers to generate housing options and help victims gain access to safe housing. DASH is also in the process of beginning renovations on our 44-unit building that will function as a low barrier, co-located emergency and transitional safe housing program for all domestic victims – regardless of addiction, mental illness, or disability. We plan to open the doors to this housing program by 2010.

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DASH Executive Director Chosen for Leadership Washington

DASH NEWS RELEASE : July 29, 2009

DASH Executive Director Peg Hacskaylo
Selected for Leadership Greater Washington Class of 2010

Washington, DC— District Alliance for Safe Housing (DASH) Executive Director Peg Hacskaylo was recently selected as a member of Leadership Greater Washington’s (LGW) 24th Class. Leadership Greater Washington’s mission is to connect and challenge diverse regional leaders for the purpose of improving the quality of life in the Greater Washington area. Ms. Hacskaylo shares the distinction of LGW Class of 2010 membership with fifty-six other leaders who collectively represent our region’s diversity in its many facets.

“I am honored to be a part of Leadership Greater Washington, and I look forward to making connections that will help me—and help DASH—to be a stronger leader and agent for change in the District,” said Hacskaylo. The 2010 Leadership class members will begin their journey in September 2009.

Established in 1986, Leadership Greater Washington was constructed by a group of regional leaders, six area Chambers of Commerce and three committed organizations: The Greater Washington Board of Trade, The Eugene and Agnes E. Meyer Foundation and The Junior League. Modeling Leadership Greater Washington after other community leadership organizations, its founders invested personal and professional resources to fulfill their vision of an organization that would foster communication and cooperation among the area’s established and emerging leaders.

Leadership Greater Washington offers dynamic, education and membership programs that promote dialogue and cooperation, enabling area leaders to find effective solutions to regional challenges. More information about the organization is available at www.lgwdc.org.

Founded in 2006, DASH provides safe housing, housing resources and information, as well as training and technical assistance to community agencies and victim service programs to increase the availability of safe, affordable housing options for women and their families. DASH serves dozens of local organizations and assists more than 1,000 local residents annually. For more information, visit www.dashdc.org.

 
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