Why every woman in America should beware of welfare cuts. Welfare is the ultimate security policy for every woman in America.
Like accident or life insurance, you hope you'll never need it. But for
yourself and your family, sisters, daughters and friends, you need to know
it's there. Without it, we have no real escape from brutal relationships
or any protection in a job market hostile to women with children. Why is
Congress trying to take it away?
--from a paid advertisement in the New York Times,
8/8/95. Cosponsored by 1199 National Health &
Human Service Employees Union, National Association of Social Workers,
Coalition of Labor Union Women, Catholics for a Free Choice, American Postal
Workers Union, AFL-CIO, Office & Professional Employees International
Union AFL-CIO, Welfare Reform Network of New York, Ms. Foundation for Women,
Feminist Majority, Wider Opportunities for Women, Women & Poverty Project,
Communications Workers of America, Democratic Socialists of America, Women's
Actions for New Directions, National Committee on Pay Equity,
United Farm workers of America AFL-CIO,
Center for Women Policy Studies, National Council for Research on Women,
National Jobs for All Coalition, National Coalition for the Homeless,
NOW Legal Defense & Education Fund.
Welfare concerns every
woman
Racist stereotype: a young black woman, never-married, with six or more children. Facts:
Compare:
--original handout by Carol Delaney, Professor
of Anthropology
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In 1990, 195,019 domestic violence cases were reported to the police in California. Of these, 7,781 were reported in Santa Clara County. (Bureau of Criminal Statistics, Sacramento, CA, 1991.) Domestic violence is the most prevalent violent crime in California, with law enforcement agencies receiving 500 reports every day. Yet, even the FBI estimates these reports underesti-mate actual cases by one-tenth. (California Alliance Against Domestic Violence, April, 1991.) According to the FBI, as many as 6 million women are abused by their partners each year. A woman is battered every 15 seconds. (The California NOW Activist. November, 1991.) One out of every two Amen can women will be physically abused at some time in her relationship lifetime. (The Battered Woman's Survival Guide, 1990.) Battering is the major cause of serious injury to women in America, more than auto accidents, muggings and rapes combined. (The Lipman Report, The American Epidemic of Violence: A Major Security Concern and Public Health Care Problem, December 15, 1985.) Among all female victims of murders that police reported to the Uniform Crime Report in 1989, 28% were believed to have been slain by husbands or boyfriends. (U.S. Dept. of Justice, Female Victims of Violent Crime. January, 1991.) Women were victims of violent intimates at a rate 3 times that of men. Women were 6 times more likely than men to be victimized by a spouse, ex-spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend. (U.S. Dept. of Justice, Female Victims of Violence Crime. January, 1991.) A study by the March of Dimes reports that one of every twelve women
is battered while she is pregnant. Battered women are four times more likely
to have low birthweight babies and twice as likely to miscarry compared
with normal mothers. (The Battered Woman's Survival Guide, 1990.)
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[1] 1990 Statistical Abstract of the United States.
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[1] "An Unequal Justice," New York Times, July 10, 1992
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