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A Breakdown Of The Government's Women's Safety Package

A Breakdown Of The Government's Women's Safety Package
Young woman is sitting hunched at a table at home, the focus is on a man's fist in the foregound of the image
lofilolo via Getty Images
Young woman is sitting hunched at a table at home, the focus is on a man's fist in the foregound of the image

Details of the Federal Government’s $100 million Women’s Safety Package to Stop Violence:

$12 million to trial with states the use of technology to keep women safe, such as GPS trackers for perpetrators. Funding to be matched by states and territories.

$5 million for safer technology, including working with telecommunications companies to distribute safe phones to women, and with the eSafety Commissioner to develop a resource package about online safety for women.

$17 million to expand initiatives such as the Safer in the Home programme to install CCTV cameras and other safety equipment. Also includes a grant to the Salvation Army to work with security experts to conduct risk assessments on victim’s homes, help change their locks and scan for bugs.

$5 million to expand 1800RESPECT, the national telephone and online counselling and information service, to ensure more women can get support.

$2 million increased funding for MensLine for tools and resources to support perpetrators not to reoffend.

•Up to $15 million to enable police in Qld to better respond to domestic violence in remote communities and for measures that reduce reoffending by Indigenous perpetrators.

$3.6 million for the Cross Border Domestic Violence Intelligence Desk to share information on victims and perpetrators who move around the cross border region of WA, SA and the NT. Measures to improve support and services for women will include increased training for frontline staff and trials of integrated service models:

$14 million to expand the DV-alert training programme to police, social workers, emergency department staff and community workers to better support women, and work with the College of General Practitioners to develop and deliver specialised training to GPs across the country.

$15 million to establish specialised domestic violence units to provide access to coordinated legal, social work and cultural liaison services for women in a single location, and allow legal services to work with local hospitals, including for women from CALD communities and women living in regional/remote areas.

$5 million for local women’s case workers, to coordinate support for women, including housing, safety and budgeting services.

$1.4 million to extend the Community Engagement Police Officers in remote Indigenous communities in the Northern territory.

•Up to $1.1 million to help remote Indigenous communities prevent and better respond to the incidence of domestic violence through targeted support.

$5 million will also be provided as a longer-term measure to change the attitudes of young people to violence, through expanding the Safer Schools website to include resources for teachers, parents and students on respectful relationships.

Source: Australian Government

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