Feminist Research Education Development and Action Centre
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The FREDA Centre
for Research on Violence
against Women and Children

Surviving Domestic Violence and Disasters
Elaine Enarson, Visiting Scholar
Disaster Preparedness Resources Centre
University of British Columbia
January 1998
When Hurricane Andrew destroyed their apartment, belongings, car, and
workplaces, Carol's husband "Just went berserk ... he really went crazy.
Before, I would get beat up maybe once a month if I was lucky. Afterward,
it was like every other day. ... I ran across a lot of women suffering,
too, with their children - husbands beating them up and leaving them. It was
pretty bad."
Women like Carol were less safe than ever from violence in their own
homes after a predictable event nobody thought would ever really happen in
a major metropolitan area. What makes women in volatile relationships so
vulnerable when disasters transform geographies, institutions, and
relationships? How well prepared are grassroots women's services to
respond to women and children residing in shelters or transition homes
during disasters or to women facing violence after a major disaster?
With funding from the BC Institute on Family Violence and the
Feminist Research, Education, Development, and Action Centre, an action
research project was designed to answer these questions. Seventy-seven
Canadian and US, provincial and state coalitions, shelters, and transition
homes responded to a mail and phone survey, including thirty-five in the
British Columbia/Yukon Society of Transition Houses. With their help, we
now have baseline data on women at risk both of violence and disaster.
Violence Against Women and Disasters: What are the
Issues?
Once considered the great "leveler," we now know that environmental
and technological disasters hit people disproportionately hard, among them
the poor, subordinated racial or ethnic groups, single parents,
minority-language speakers, recent migrants, children, the elderly, and
disabled persons. Women's disaster vulnerability has recently been
recognized but it will not surprise readers to learn that pets, tourists,
and cultural artifacts receive more attention than battered women in the
disaster literature.
Disasters have no single impact on women. Paradoxically, a family home
destroyed by fire may loosen the ties binding women to violent partners;
disaster relief money can buy a bus ticket out of town for women ready to
leave; and responding to catastrophe may reduce abuse temporarily. More
than simply victims, battered women develop survival skills which need
investigation in disaster contexts.
But living with the "daily disaster" of domestic violence puts women at
special risk before, during, and after disasters. In the vicious dynamic of
power and control, theirs is a world of increasingly narrow social
networks, isolation, and financial dependence. Like their physical and
emotional health, women's sense of self-worth and efficacy diminishes in
the face of continued violence. As one shelter worker noted, fragile
support systems can make battered women even more vulnerable after
disasters:
So many victims of battery have been isolated from the normal
networks of support - family, job, things like that ... Now here's this
person that's holding on, just barely holding on - the disaster hits.
It's not just them, but everybody around them, they scatter. The little
bit of support that's been helping that victim hold it together is gone,
and in fact, they may be forced into a situation - which we saw here - of
ending up in the home of the family of the abuser and actually having more
to deal with, and less support than they've ever had before. I mean, it just
mushrooms - the stress level of that victim.
Severe weather events like mud slides or blizzards isolate women at home
in unsafe environments without working telephones or accessible roads;
contact with courts and crisis counselors may be lost when major disasters
disrupt or destroy lifeline services, including law enforcement agencies.
Relationship stress factors increase when families struggle to replace
lost possessions, housing, jobs, and peace of mind; a counselor working
with men after a California earthquake observed that "many men used the
quake as a way to get themselves back into an old relationship." For women
and children in shelters, mandatory evacuation following an industrial
accident or in advance of wildfires is a second-order evacuation, and
designated evacuation or relief centres may not protect their privacy or
safety:
And the Red Cross shelters, those types of shelters, are not
safe for them ... [The abusers] are just going to put two and two together
and say OK, well where is she going to go? And so I think this really
shows that we need to have a plan of action ahead of time ... [I]f something
happens and our shelter's unavailable, is there another shelter, across the
state even, where we could transfer her? Because they're there for a reason.
It's specifically because they're in danger.
When the dust clears or the waters recede, women coping with physical
and/or emotional abuse must compete with other impacted residents for
scarce housing, child care, employment, education, transportation, and
health services. Affordable housing stocks are likely to decline after
disasters, when cheap housing on hazard-prone land is damaged or destroyed
by flood waters, earthquakes, or tornados, forcing some women back into
unsafe conditions and ultimately back into counseling and court.
Ironically, relief funds may be more available to the abuser remaining at
home than to women living in shelters.
Putting Disasters on the Agenda in Battered Women's
Programs
"What we give them is all that they have," one worker said of her
shelter. As shelters and transition homes are not generally recognized as
priority facilities housing and serving an especially vulnerable
population, their self-reliance through disaster preparedness is
critical.
Programs responding to the survey rarely reported receiving any
official information on disaster preparation or being represented on
local, regional, or provincial disaster planning groups. How safe are
their centres, shelters or transition homes? Most reported their physical
facilities "relatively safe" although they may be in older buildings
centrally located in hazardous coastal or flood plain areas. A number of
British Columbia programs in a known earthquake zone reported that their
facilities were "relatively safe" but added "not safe in the event of an
earthquake."
Disaster planning is not a priority for domestic violence programs
working hard at "securing basic needs for women and children, for example
safety, housing, etc." Fewer than half reported taking any steps toward
disaster readiness.
In British Columbia and the Yukon Territory, a region at risk of
flooding, mud slide, transportation accidents, and severe weather events,
with major metropolitan areas at risk of earthquakes, 80% of the 35
responding programs reported either no preparedness steps (12 of 35) or
only minimal steps (16 of 35), for example storing food or having
evacuation plans "in case of fire but without follow-up plans." Among
these were six programs which each sheltered between 500 to 600 women and
children during the last fiscal year.
Asked about the primary barriers to greater disaster readiness, they
reported the obvious, "Time and money. Demand for our services is very
high and no increases in funding are like funding cuts to us." Lack of
knowledge about regional disaster response and lack of community
leadership were also cited. Insensitivity to domestic violence issues may
frustrate the initiative of some programs, as in this account from an
earthquake-zone transition home, "I called earthquake readiness at city
hall and we didn't have a big enough group to warrant a meeting. They
wanted us to organize our block or neighbors. I don't have the time, and I
worry about safety issues. Besides, we live in an upscale neighborhood
that doesn't like us very much."
Where disaster preparedness was more extensive, it was encouraged by
personal relationships with local emergency responders (especially in
rural communities), prior disaster experience on the part of key staff
members, government mandate, and coalition leadership. For example, in one
rural North Dakota town the local emergency team includes both the shelter
manager and her police officer husband; in rural British Columbia, one
woman was both an Emergency Social Services volunteer and a shelter
worker, and a program serving indigenous women reported receiving disaster
information from the local band.
As the Red River rose last April, program staff in Grand Forks
struggled to sandbag their homes, centre and city, but ultimately lost
all three. Down river in Winnipeg, shelter staff tried to prepare their
facilities against sewer back-up and flooding, but supplies were scarce. In
addition to reallocating shelter space to protect equipment and supplies,
the two local shelters worked creatively under pressure to locate local
safe space large enough to keep clients and staff together in the event of
emergency evacuation. Just before the river crested however, out-of-area
evacuation plans were substituted by their major funding agency, bringing
conflicting views of client service and autonomy into sharp relief, "They
are our clients and can choose ... Who has the say?"
As the Red River Valley flood indicated, critical decisions were made
on the run, in communities located on a known flood plain but unprepared
for protecting battered women and their children in emergencies. Disaster
planning cannot make people safe from the "flood of the century" or other
disasters, but can minimize loss and enable people and organizations to
cope more effectively with extreme conditions.
Doing More With Less: How Disasters Impact Domestic Violence
Work
When a disaster strikes, shelters must and do respond flexibly to
extraordinary conditions. In Hawaii, after Hurricane Iniki, the local
shelter had no back-up generator and lost power for six weeks; until the
program director protested, abusers violating protection orders received
only citations as the jail was closed by the storm. "Scattered all over
the countryside," staff and volunteers in Grand Forks struggled to keep
the crisis line open and later cleaned up the "slippery, slimy, smelly
mud" which destroyed the centre's costly office equipment. Fourteen women
shared one room and two phones for three months in a small office on the
campus of the local university. Six months later, they learned their new
site was located on the wrong site of a planned new dike, displacing
them again. In the wake of flooding in Saguenay, Quebec, shelter staff
reported:
Everything actually came to a standstill. The police services
were overworked and stretched. There were no phones, no electricity, no
water. All the energy was spent fending off the most immediate problems
and responding to essential needs. It required great flexibility on the
part of the staff.
Under these conditions, does the incidence of reported violence against
women also increase? Simple causal effects, for example on employment
rates or migration patterns, are difficult to attribute to events as
complex and long-lasting as major natural or technological disasters. In
severely disrupted areas lacking functioning telephones, courts, or
responding police officers, indicators like requests for protection orders
or numbers of crisis line calls may be inadequate. Few domestic violence
programs have record-keeping systems in place to distinguish and track
disaster-relevant calls. Nonetheless, increased domestic violence has been
reported by domestic violence programs hit by disasters in California,
Florida, Missouri, and, most recently, in the wake of the devastating ice
storm in Quebec and Ontario.
In this study, nine of the 13 most severely impacted programs reported
that demand increased as much as six months or a year after the event.
Hit by flooding in late April, the Grand Forks program reported that
crisis calls rose by 21% and counseling of on-going clients by 59% between
July l996 and July l997; they processed an additional 18% more protection
orders in August l997 than in August l996. Staff also reported more
referrals from emergency rooms, suggesting a rise in physical assaults.
Up river in Fargo, sister programs reported a similar pattern as they
struggled to cope with flood-displaced families moving into their area,
out-of-town relief workers, and new referrals from disaster hotlines.
Down river in Canada, where two small communities were flooded and
Winnipeg was sandbagged against the flood threat, programs documented
no flood-induced increase in service demand six months after the crisis.
Impacted programs reported greatly increased case management with
existing clients. In the case below, lack of housing forced a woman back
into an unsafe situation:
One woman had gotten a protection order right
before the flood and then when the evacuation was taking place, she really
didn't have ... basically, she had no family around here, her support
system was very small. And so, because of that, she contacted him ...
she felt like she was forced into the situation and then things got bad
and she had to get out of that situation so it created even more
problems.
Because the local shelter was destroyed, the woman sought protection at a
friend's home and turned again to her local crisis intervention centre
for support. As the Saguenay program reported, their main challenge
came not from new cases of disaster-induced violence but a:
great increase in crisis management, helping women
who had been relocated to find alternative housing. Some women
in the shelter lost their homes, many had indirect problems not
related to family violence to be solved. Some women were not able
to see their children who were not with them. Increased stress
and worries.
A second program in the region also reported that court cases were
postponed, women stayed longer in the shelter, and women
were displaced from transitional housing.
While post-disaster assistance is often very generous and domestic
violence programs reported many donations, most noted that the "sympathy
factor" is short-lived, but disaster recovery complex and long-lasting. In
North Dakota, programs reported both private and government funds were
redirected away from domestic violence to "flood victims," prompting a
staff member to protest, "We feel we are flood relief ... we're that one
piece of hope and now that's being taken away."
When floods, fires, or toxic contamination disrupt a large area,
shelters must respond to women without the assistance of other local
shelters, motels, safe homes, public transportation, legal advice, housing
and other social services. Disrupted courts and overburdened police
officers not only put women at risk but increase demands on stressed
shelter workers; six months after the Red River crested in Grand Forks,
staff reported it was still a "huge struggle" and a long drive to a
different courthouse to get protection orders signed. Programs lose
funding when planned fundraisers must be canceled or postponed, and
volunteers and board members often withdraw their labour, if only
temporarily. Many respondents reported staff overload when some staff
members needed release time to protect their homes and families or to make
repairs, "It's fine to say 'you need to do what you need to do,' but you
also then need to have the backup on the hotlines. ... It's important to
plan for that."
Only one program, located on the Gulf Coast of Texas where
severe weather is common, reported personnel guidelines in place
specifying leave and salary policies for disaster-impacted staff.
Disasters mean hard work for residents, emergency responders, local
governments, and women's advocates. Programs responded to disaster-hit
sister programs by taking in clients, replacing supplies, and sharing
resources. Some expanded their mission to include housing evacuated
families and relief workers (e.g., nurses caring for premature infants from
an evacuated hospital). One BC program responded with critical-incident
stress debriefing, and another prepared lists of counselors and offered
their services to the local emergency response team when their area was
threatened by flooding. A California shelter distributed free emergency
kits and flyers through their regular public education programs after a
major earthquake; another received funding to integrate emergency
preparedness materials into "life information materials" offered to
stabilized residents to help them "get on with their lives." The
slowly-developing Missouri flood made possible a statewide coordinated
response which included the domestic violence coalition; this initiative
led to the modification of an existing grant for substance abuse in the
disaster recovery period to include domestic violence services.
Organizations with staff who are experienced at operating a shelter for
displaced people in crisis, collecting and distributing personal and
household goods, advocating for crisis intervention and recovery services,
placing homeless families in shelter, and running a crisis line, are an
important part of community capacity to respond to disasters. However, a
frustrated shelter manager complained that local emergency planners "don't
really think about us."
Making Women Safer: An Integrated Community Response
Most programs would like to do more, including ensuring that their
facility is included in existing emergency plans (72%), providing staff
disaster training (68%), attending area meetings on preparedness (64%),
and developing emergency plans and written protocols with other agencies
(60%). Emergency managers will find this high degree of potential disaster
readiness encouraging. But programs struggling to meet existing needs with
limited or declining resources cannot move toward disaster readiness.
Funding priorities in emergency response organizations as well as women's
services must reflect and support the needs of women at risk of violence
in disasters.
Specifically engaging those groups most vulnerable to disasters is an
essential part of building disaster-resilient communities. Like other
women vulnerable to disasters, women living with violence need services but
also a seat at the table. Emergency practitioners accustomed to partnering
with mainstream community organizations need to work with grassroots
women's organizations serving at-risk populations. Preparedness programs
designed for cohesive neighborhoods must include the insecurely housed,
like women and children in domestic violence and homeless shelters. Mental
health and other field responders should receive training on domestic
violence and disaster issues. In this regard, a strong battered women's
movement articulating women's needs and interests before, during, and
after disasters is a vital resource in disaster mitigation.
Just as disasters are not salient issues for most women's services, battered
women's needs during disasters and recovery from them are not on the agendas
of most emergency managers. An integrated community response to women,
violence, and disasters demands a new partnership between these two
professional communities.
Toward this end, two sets of guidelines have been developed
outlining disaster
planning issues in shelters, and action guidelines for shelters, coalitions,
and emergency practitioners during disaster preparedness, response, recovery
and mitigation.
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