S-4449 _______________________________________________
SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 8433
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State of Washington 51st Legislature 1990 Regular Session
By Senators Benitz and West
Read first time 2/1/90 and referred to Committee on Law & Justice.
WHEREAS, For too long the police and the courts have been asked to deal with violence as their issue alone; and
WHEREAS, It is not yet fully recognized, but a certainty nevertheless, that medicine and public health professionals can provide local communities with effective options for preventing violence in our homes and in our communities; and
WHEREAS, Communities must determine what their values are regarding interpersonal violence and work together to protect those values; and
WHEREAS, Violence has a clear and measurable impact on the physical and mental health of all citizens; and
WHEREAS, Although much money is expended on health care in emergency rooms and long-term physical and mental health care, and perpetrators of violence require additional taxpayer dollars expended on law enforcement and courts, the full impact of interpersonal violence can never be adequately explained in dollars; and
WHEREAS, The abuse of women may be the most frequent cause of physical injury for which women seek medical attention; and
WHEREAS, Nationally, in 1980 alone, suicide, homicide, and aggravated assault taken together accounted for more than fifty thousand deaths, one million eight hundred thousand hospital days, and seven hundred fifty-four million dollars in health care costs; and
WHEREAS, Nationally four million Americans are brutally victimized in the privacy of their own homes, including one million children, many of whom are infants, one million senior citizens, and one million five hundred thousand women, many of whom are pregnant; and
WHEREAS, Examples of interpersonal violence for which there are proven evaluation, treatment, and prevention strategies include child sexual abuse and child abuse, spousal abuse, rape and sexual assault, elder abuse, neglect, assault, and homicide; and
WHEREAS, No entity in state or local government is presently charged with the authority to address the risk factors that lead to intentional injuries that are the leading causes of morbidity and mortality or to take action to reduce them, to promote health, and to prevent injury; and
WHEREAS, The state and local public health systems report that they do not have sufficient useful data on regional bases to determine the level of intentional injury in Washington and to develop reduction strategies;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, By the Senate of the state of Washington, the House of Representatives concurring, That a joint select committee on interpersonal violence is created composed of two representatives each from the Senate and House of Representatives caucuses, appointed by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, respectively, and including but not limited to representatives of the news media, religious leadership, the business community, public and private education, medicine, nursing, public health, law enforcement, coroners, health education, social services, the court system, and academia appointed by the secretary of health; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the committee be cochaired by the Senate and House of Representatives members representing the majority caucuses of each house; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the legislature and department of health shall provide staff for the joint select committee on interpersonal violence; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the joint select committee shall:
(1) Plan and staff a multidisciplinary state-wide conference on interpersonal violence to be held in the fall of 1990 to consider: Spousal abuse, child abuse, elder abuse, acquaintance or date rape and violence, media violence and pornography, rape and marital rape, sexual offenders, abusive partners, innovative medical advances in treating sexual assault, the role of the clergy and church-based programs, teaching nonviolent parenting, substance abuse and violence, incest, and medical responses to abuse;
(2) Participate with local public health officials in collecting available data to improve the targeting of violence reduction efforts and help local people to evaluate change in state and local programs and political structures; and
(3) Provide technical assistance to local leaders and elected officials as they plan and design regional conferences on collaborative methods for eliminating and reducing interpersonal violence in local communities; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the joint select committee be funded by appropriations to the Senate and the House of Representatives and the department of health, and the conference be funded by state and federal funds.