SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) According to the 2005 California Women’s Health Survey, in California, 9.2 percent of women live in homes where domestic abuse occurs. According to the Department of Justice, in 2006, Alameda County law enforcement responded to 7,331 calls relating to domestic violence. Domestic violence is ubiquitous and cuts across all economic and education levels and all age groups, ethnicities, and other social and community characteristics.
(b) According to 2006 statistics from the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics, in nearly half of violent crimes where the victim and the aggressor are related, the aggressor is either the spouse or ex-spouse of the victim. Marriage license fees collected pursuant to this act would help communities intervene and prevent domestic violence when the aggressor is the spouse or ex-spouse of the victim.
(c) According to the National Woman Abuse Prevention Project in Washington, D.C., domestic violence puts children at risk. Children born into families where domestic violence occurs are physically abused or seriously neglected at a rate that is significantly higher than the national average in the general population. Birth certificate fees collected pursuant to this act would help communities with the cost of ensuring that children who are born into families with domestic violence receive the help they need.
(d) Studies show more than 10 percent of women are victims of domestic violence during pregnancy. According to a January 2009 study published in The Lancet (a British medical journal), pregnant women who are assaulted by their spouses are 50 percent more likely to experience fetal loss, often repeatedly, than women who are not abused during pregnancy. Women who are battered during pregnancy are also more likely to die or have children who are born prematurely with low birth weights and intense medical needs. Fetal death certificate fees would help communities with what it costs to ensure that pregnant women with violent spouses receive help, protection, and care for their unborn children and infants.
(e) Domestic violence is a learned behavior and generational. Studies show that boys who witness family violence are 100 times more likely to batter their female partners and girls who witness their mother’s abuse are more likely to be battered as adults.
(f) Domestic violence costs are high because, not only is there a toll on families emotionally and financially, but there are also direct and hidden costs to society. The most direct costs are the high costs of law enforcement, civil and criminal justice, and health services and other community-based services. Less direct and visible costs include job turnover, loss of productivity, school absenteeism, and low performance in school.
(g) Domestic violence requires multifaceted intervention that encourages civil, criminal, health, and social service sectors to work together to align the objectives, protocols, policies, and activities of each sector. Alameda County has determined that achieving the alignment, which requires governmental oversight and coordination of multiple agencies involved in domestic violence matters, is an essential link in the comprehensive effort to eliminate domestic violence.
(h) Since 2005, the Alameda County Family Justice Center (ACFJC), which is funded in part by vital records fees, has achieved the alignment described in subdivision (g) with more than 65 domestic violence providers, many of which provide services at one common location. The services provided by the ACFJC include legal assistance, counseling and medical services, and crisis intervention. The ACFJC has been an essential link for more than 20,000 domestic violence victims and has quickly connected the victims to services when they need it most. Alameda County victims are now increasingly seeking help from law enforcement and shelters before domestic violence escalates to death. Between 2002 and 2007, Alameda County has seen a 70-percent decrease in domestic violence homicides.
(i) Since the ACFJC’s opening, victims are feeling more emboldened to work with prosecutors. The Alameda County District Attorney’s office reports 20 percent more victims are willing or able to pursue charges against aggressors and 24 percent fewer domestic violence cases are dismissed, which gives victims a renewed faith and confidence that the justice system works. The number of domestic violence cases being charged as felonies in Alameda County has nearly doubled from 13 percent to 23 percent, illustrating an increase in the quality and depth of law enforcement investigations enabled by the coordination.