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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: April
22, 2005
Audio Clip
Sen. Debbe Leftwich
House Members Turn Their Backs on Victims of Rape/Domestic Violence
A bill to give victims of rape and domestic violence
greater economic protection won’t be heard this session after
the House failed to vote on the measure by their April 21 deadline
for committee action on Senate bills. State Sen. Debbe
Leftwich said while she and other supporters were deeply disappointed,
they were not surprised.
Sen. Leftwich, D-OKC, is principal author of the Senate Bill 935,
which would have created the “Victims Economic Security and
Safety Act.” The bill would have enabled victims to take up
to 12 weeks unpaid leave from work to seek medical help, legal assistance,
counseling, safety planning and other assistance without being penalized
by their employers.
“Earlier this session the House Business and Economic Development
committee killed the House version of this measure. Based on the
shockingly insensitive comments made in that committee, we really
weren’t optimistic about getting a fair hearing,” Leftwich
said. “The House version was drastically amended in the hopes
of keeping it alive, changing the unpaid leave from 12 to just 3
weeks but they still killed it. By contrast the Senate version passed
unanimously in this chamber.”
Among the comments made by various committee members opposing HB
1699:
• “Seems like three weeks is too long, especially when
they already have two weeks vacation.”
• “It promotes discrimination between males and females.”
• “And this name, victim’s, is offensive to me.
It could have been called something more pleasant.”
“I think most of the people of this state would have been
shocked to hear some of the comments made about this proposal. One
representative said the bill would slam Oklahoma back into the dark
ages. The bill wouldn’t, but attitudes like those will,”
Leftwich said.
Leftwich said studies have shown that an estimated two million women
a year are physically or sexually assaulted or stalked by an intimate
partner in the United States and that one-fourth to one-half of
domestic violence victims report they lost a job because of domestic
violence. Similarly, almost 50 percent of sexual assault survivors
reported they lost their job or were forced to quite in the aftermath
of the crime.
“The truth is that it is more expensive for a business to
replace an experienced worker than to make sure these victims have
adequate leave time. What these members need to realize is that
this could happen to their families. No one is immune from this
crime,” Leftwich said. “Has the House already forgotten
about Laci Peterson? Domestic violence is the number-one cause of
death for pregnant women in this country.”
The measure had the support of several organizations, including
YWCA, The Oklahoma Conference of Churches and Oklahoma’s Catholic
Charities and other groups providing counseling and services to
victims of rape and domestic violence.
Senator Leftwich noted that earlier this week, the House had presented
a citation to three Afghani women for creating the Voice of Afghan
Women Radio. The citation commends the project “for playing
a significant role in helping Afghan women reclaim their rights
as human beings since the fall in 2001 of the oppressive Taliban
regime…”
“I think it was appropriate for the House to honor those women
for their effort—but at the same time, I think it is deplorable
that some of those same House members couldn’t be bothered
to hear and support a bill that may have saved the lives of Oklahoma
women in their own communities,” Leftwich said.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office- (405) 521-5774

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