OMB Clearance # 1121-NNNN
Expiration Date / /
U.S. Department of Justice
Office on Violence Against Women
Semi-Annual Progress Report for
Grants to Reduce Violent CrimesDomestic Violence, Dating violence,
Sexual Assault, and Stalking against Women on Campus Program
Brief Instructions: This form must be completed for each Grants to Reduce Domestic Violence, Dating violence,
Sexual Assault, and Stalking Violent Crimes Against Women on Campus Program (Campus Program) grant received. A grant administrator or coordinator must ensure that the form is completed fully with regard to all grant-funded activities. Grant partners, however, may complete sections relevant to their portion of the grant. Grant administrators or coordinators are responsible for compiling and submitting a single report that reflects all information collected from grant partners.
All grantees should read each section to determine which questions they must answer, based on the activities engaged in under this grant during the current reporting period. Sections B, E, and F of this form must be completed by all grantees. In section A, subsection A1 must be answered. In section C, subsection C1 must be answered. In Section D and subsections A2, C2-C76, grantees must answer an initial question about whether they engaged in certain activities during the current reporting period. If the response is yes, then the grantee must complete that section/subsection. If the response is no, the grantee may be asked to explain, and the rest of that section/subsection is skipped.
For example, 1) if you are a Campus Program grantee providing training and victim services with staff funded under this grant, you should complete A1, A2, B, C1, C32, D, E, F (and answer “no” in C3-C6C2 and C4-C7), or 2) if you are a Campus Program grantee providing training with staff funded under this grant, you should complete A1, A2, B, C1, C32, E, and F (and answer “no” in C3-C6C2,C4-C7, and D).
The activities of volunteers or interns shouldmay be reported if they weare coordinated or supervised by Campus Program-funded staff or if Campus Program funds substantially supported their activities.
For further information on filling out this form, refer to the separate set of instructions, which contains detailed definitions and examples, illustrating how questions should be answered.
SECTION Page Number, check after edits
Section A: General Information 1
A1 Grant Information 1
A2 Staff Information 34
Section B: Purpose Areas 5 454
Section C: Function Areas 5656
C1 Minimum Requirements 5656
C2 Policies 121
C3Training 11153
C43 Campus Education 13194
C54 Products 152215
C56 Data Collection and Communication Systems 162316
C67 System and Capital Improvement 172417
Section D: Victim Services 182518
Section E: Campus and Community Measures 23 23232
Section F: Narrative 2543425
Appendix A: Status of Goals and Objectives Table 25
A. GENERAL INFORMATION
A1. Grant Information
All grantees must complete this subsection.
1. Date of report ____________________
2. Current reporting period January 1-June 30 July 1-December 31 _________ (Year)
3. Grantee name
4. Grant number (the federal grant number assigned to your Campus Program grant)
5a. Type of lead institution (Check the answer[s] that best describes the institution receiving the Campus Program funds.
Check all that apply.)
Public school
Private school
Tribal school
Historically black college
Other (specify):
5b. Additional designations of lead institution (Check all that apply.)
Tribal college or university
Historically black college or university
Faith-based college or university
Community college
College or university serving primarily Latino or Hispanic populations
University or colleges based in the territories of Guam, Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Northern Mariana Islands, or American Samoa
College or university serving primarily either men or women
Other (specify):
6. Is this a Higher Education Association Special Initiative to Address Violent Crimes on Campuses grant?
Yes No If yes, identify the association: ____________________________________________
7a. Is this a consortium project?
Yes No
7b. Is this a flagship project?
Yes No
7c. If you answered yes to either 7a. or 7b. above, list each participating members and indicate the number of each types of institutions represented in your consortiumproject in 7d and 7&e.
Institution name:
(1) ______________________________________________________________
(2) ______________________________________________________________
(3) ______________________________________________________________
(4) ______________________________________________________________
7d. Type of institution (Check theReport the number of each type of institution of your answer[s] that best describe the consortium project members.) Check all that apply.)
Public school |
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Private school |
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7ec. Additional designation of participating institutions (Report the number of each type of institution represented in your project, if appropriate.)
Tribal school |
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Historically black college |
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Faith-based |
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Community college |
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Latino or /a/Hispanic |
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Territory-based |
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Single sex |
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Other (specify): |
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Public School
Private School
Tribal School
Historically black college
Other (specify): ______________________
8 . Point of contact (person responsible for the day-to-day coordination or administration of the grant)
First name _________________ MI _____ Last name _________________________________
Institution name (if different from grantee name) __________________________________________________________________
Address
City ___________________________________ State ________ Zip _______________________
9. Does this grant specifically address tribal populations? (Check yes if your Campus Program grant focuses on
tribal populations, and indicate which tribes or nations you serve or intend to serve.)
Yes No If yes, which tribes/nations:
10. What percentage of your Campus Program funds was directed to each of these areas? (Report the area[s] addressed by your Campus Program grant during the current reporting period and estimate the approximate percentage of funds [or resources] used to address each area [consider education, training, victim services, etc.]. The grantee may choose how to make this determination. If the Campus Program grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this question should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Throughout this form, the term sexual assault includes both assaults committed by offenders who are strangers to the victim/survivor and assaults committed by offenders who are known to, related by blood or marriage to, or in a dating relationship with the victim. The term domestic violence/ dating violence applies to any pattern of coercive behavior that is used by one person to gain power and control over a current or former intimate partner or dating partner. Stalking is defined as a course of conduct directed at a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to fear for his or her safety or the safety of others or suffer substantial emotional distress.
(See 3-4 the separate instructions for more complete definitions.)
Throughout this form, the term sexual assault includes both assaults committed by offenders who are strangers to the victim/survivor and assaults committed by offenders who are known to, or related by blood or marriage to, or in a dating relationship with the victim. The term domestic violence applies to any pattern of coercive behavior that is used by one person to gain power and control over a current or former intimate partner. The term domestic violence applies to any pattern of coercive behavior that is used by one person to gain power and control over a current or former intimate partner. Domestic violence includes dDating violence, which is violence committed by a person who is or has been in a social relationship of a romantic or intimate nature with the victim. Stalking is defined as a course of conduct directed at a specific person that places that person in reasonable fear of the death of, or serious bodily injury to, herself or himself, a member of her/his immediate family, or her/his spouse or intimate partner. (See pages 3-4 the separate instructions for more complete definitions.)
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Percentage of grant funds |
Sexual assault |
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Domestic violence/dating violence |
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Stalking |
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TOTAL |
100% |
A 2. Staff Information
Were Campus Program funds used to fund staff positions during the current reporting period? Check yes if Campus Program funds were used to pay staff, including part-time staff and contractors. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Yes--answer question 11
No--skip to Section B
11. Staff (Report the total number of full-time equivalent (FTE) staff funded by the Campus Program grant during the current reporting period. Report staff by functions performed, not by title or location. Include employees who are part-time and/or only partially funded with these grant funds as well as consultants/contractors. . If an employee or contractor was not employed or utilized for only a portion of over the entire reporting period, prorate appropriately. For example, if you hired a full-time advocate in October who was 100% funded with Campus Program funds, you would report that as .50 FTEs. Report all FTEs in decimals, not percentages. One FTE is equal to 1,040 hours—40 hours per week x 26 weeks. andround to the second decimal. If an employee or contractor was not employed or utilized over the entire reporting period, report the average. Round to the second decimal. See separate instructions for examples of how to calculate and prorate FTEs for part-time staff and contractors.)
Staff |
Grant-funded staff FTEs |
Administrator (director, fiscal manager) |
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AttorneyCampus police/security officer |
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Campus police/security officer Civil attorney |
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Counselor |
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Evaluator |
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Information technology staffspecialist |
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Legal advocate (does not include attorney or paralegal) |
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Paralegal |
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Program coordinator (training coordinator, victim services coordinator) |
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Support staff (secretary, administrative assistant, bookkeeper, accountant) |
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Trainer/educator (includes peer educators if paid) |
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Victim advocate (includes domestic violence, sexual assault, dual) |
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Other (specify): ___________________________________________ |
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TOTAL |
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B. PURPOSE AREAS
All grantees must complete this section. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
12. Statutory purpose areas (Check all purpose areas that apply to activities supported withby Campus Program funds during the current reporting period.)
Check ALL that apply |
Purpose areas |
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To provide personnel, training, technical assistance, data collection, and other equipment with respect to the increased apprehension, investigation, and adjudication of people committing violent crimes against womendomestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking on campus. |
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To develop and implement campus policies, protocols, and services that more effectively identify and respond to the crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking, and to train campus administrators, campus security personnel, and personnel serving on campus disciplinary boards on such policies, protocols, and services. To train campus administrators, campus security personnel, and personnel serving on campus disciplinary or judicial boards to more effectively identify and respond to violent crimes against women on campus, including the crimes of sexual assault, stalking, domestic violence, and dating violence. |
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To implement and operate education programs for the prevention of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalkingviolent crimes against women. .
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To develop, enlarge, or strengthen victim services programs on the campuses of institutions involved, including programs providing legal, medical, or psychological counseling, for victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking, and to improve delivery of victim assistance on campus. To develop, enlarge, or strengthen support services programs, including medical or psychological counseling, for victims of sexual offense crimes. |
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To create, disseminate, or otherwise provide assistance and information about victims' options on and off campus to bring disciplinary or other legal action, including assistance to victims in immigration matters. To develop and implement more effective campus policies, protocols, orders, and services specifically devoted to prevent, identify, and respond to violent crimes against women on campus, including the crimes of dating violence, domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking. |
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To develop, install, or expand data collection and communication systems, including computerized systems, linking campus security to local law enforcement for the purpose of identifying and tracking arrests, protection orders, violations of protection orders, prosecutions, and convictions with respect to the crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking on campus. To develop, install, or expand data collection and communication systems, including computerized systems, linking campus security to local law enforcement for the purpose of identifying and tracking arrests, protection orders, violations of protection orders, prosecutions, and convictions with respect to violent crimes against women on campus, including the crimes of dating violence, domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking. |
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To provide capital improvements (including improved lighting and communications facilities, but not including the construction of buildings) on campuses to address the crimes of dating violence, domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking. To develop, enlarge, or strengthen victim service programs for the campus and to improve delivery of victim services on campus. To provide capital improvements (including improved lighting and communications facilities, but not including the construction of buildings) on campuses to address violent crimes against women on campus, including the crimes of dating violence, domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking. |
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To support improved coordination among campus administrators, campus security personnel, and local law enforcement to reduce domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking on campus. To support improved coordination among campus administrators, campus security personnel, and local law enforcement to reduce violent crimes against women on campus. |
13. Program priority areas addressed by your grant (In addition to the purpose areas identified above, the Campus Program Grant Application and Program Guidelines may have identified several areas that would receive priority consideration. If your program addressed any of these priority areas during the current reporting period, list them below.)
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C. FUNCTION AREAS
C1. Minimum Requirements
All grantees must complete this section. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
For the purposes of this reporting form, education means providing general information that will increase public awareness of sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, or stalking. Training means providing information on sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking that enables persons to improve their response to victims/survivors as it relates to their role in the system.
14. Prevention and education program events provided for incoming students (Report the total number of prevention and education program events supported with Campus Program funds provided for incoming students during the current reporting period. Report the number of prevention and education program events supported with a funding source other than your Campus Program grant provided to incoming students during the current reporting period.)
Total number of prevention and education program events provided with Campus Program funds
Total number of prevention and education program events provided with other funding sources
Total number of prevention and education program events provided -----------------
15. Was the mandatory prevention and education program for incoming students developed in collaboration with campus and community-based victim advocacy organizations?
Yes No
16a. Prevention and education for incoming students (In the first column, report the number of incoming students during the current reporting period. In the second column, report the number of incoming students who received prevention and education supported with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. In the third column, report the number of incoming students who received prevention and education supported with a funding source other than Campus Program funds during the current reporting period.)
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Total Nnumber incoming Sstudents |
Number educated with Campus Program funds |
Number educated with other funding sources |
Number iIncoming not eEducatedNumber educated with other funding sources |
Incoming students |
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16b. If all incoming students were not provided with prevention education, please explain in the box below.
17. Topics of prevention and education program events for incoming students (Indicate all topics addressed in the prevention and education program events provided to incoming students during the current reporting period. Check all that apply.)
Dating violence prevention
Domestic violence prevention
Sexual assault prevention
Sexual harassment prevention
Stalking prevention
Dating violence overview, dynamics, and services
Domestic violence overview, dynamics, and services
Sexual assault overview, dynamics, and services
Sexual harassment overview, dynamics, and services
Stalking overview, dynamics, and services
Other (specify): _________________________
1 8. Do you evaluate your prevention and education program events for incoming students with pre- and/or post-tests? (Check only one answer. If you conduct such tests, discuss results in question 55.)
Always
Most of the time
Some of the time
Rarely
Never
198. Training program events provided for campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members (Report the total number of training program events supported with Campus Program funds provided for campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members during the current reporting period. Report the number of training program events supported with a funding source other than your Campus Program grant provided for campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members during the current reporting period. Report total number of events for each group and each funding source in the total sections.)
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Number provided with Campus Program funds |
Number provided with another funding source |
Total eEvents pProvidedNumber provided with another funding source |
Campus police/security officers
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Judicial/disciplinary board members
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Total events
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2019. Were the training programs for campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members developed in collaboration with campus and community-based victim advocacy organizations?
Yes No
2120. Training for campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members (In the first column, report the number of campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members who received training supported with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. In the second column, report the number of campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members who received training supported with a funding source other than Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. In the third column, report the numbers of those who have did not received training during the current reporting period, and in the last column, report the total. Report the total of each column in the last row.)
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Number trained with Campus Program funds |
Number trained with another funding source |
Number not trained |
Total Number not trained |
Campus police/security officers |
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Judicial/disciplinary board members |
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Total |
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2 22 1. Training content areas for campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members (Indicate all topics covered in training program events provided to campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members during the current reporting period. Check all that apply.)
Sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking
Confidentiality
Dating violence overview, dynamics, and services
Domestic violence overview, dynamics, and services
Drug-facilitated sexual assault
Safety planning for victims
Sexual assault overview, dynamics, and services
Sexual harassment overview, dynamics, and services
Stalking/cyberstalking overview, dynamics, and services
Response to victims who have been trafficked
Other (specify): _____________________
Justice and disciplinary systems
Campus police/security response
Civil court procedures
Criminal court procedures
Disciplinary/judicial board response
Domestic violence statutes/codes
Firearms and domestic violence
Identifying predominant aggressor/decreasing dual arrests
Judicial response
Mandatory reporting requirements
Pro-arrest policies
Protection orders (including full faith and credit)
Sexual assault statutes/codes
Stalking statutes/codes
Other (specify): _______________________
Underserved populations
Issues specific to victims/survivors who:
live in rural areas
are American Indian or Alaska Native
are Asian
are black or African American
are have disabilitiesed
are elderly
are Hispanic or Latino
are homeless or living in poverty
are immigrants, refugees, or asylum seekers (documented or undocumented)
are victims of human trafficking
are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or intersex
are Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander
have mental health problems issues
have substance abuse problems issues
have limited English proficiency
Other (specify):
Campus and community response
Campus response to sexual assault
Clery Act reporting
Coordinated community response
Response teams (DART, DVRT, SART)
Technology
Other (specify):
23. Do you evaluate training program events for campus police/security officers and judicial/disciplinary board members with pre- and/or post-tests? (Check only one answer. If you conduct such tests, discuss results in question 55.)
Always
Most of the time
Some of the time
Rarely
Never
2 24. Coordinated campus-based community response activities supported by Campus Program funds during the current reporting period (Check the appropriate boxes to indicate the campus-based groups or offices, even if they are not partners with which you have an internal memorandum of understanding [IMOU], that you provided victims/survivors referrals to, received referrals from, engaged in consultation with, provided technical assistance to, and/or attended meetings with, according to the usual frequency of those interactions. If the interactions were not part of a regular schedule, you will need to estimate the frequency with which these interactions occurred during the current reporting period. In the last column, indicate the campus-based groups or offices with which you have an IMOU for the purposes of the Campus Program grant.)
Campus-based group or office |
Victim/survivor referrals, consultations, technical assistance |
Meetings |
IMOU partner |
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Daily |
Weekly |
Monthly |
Weekly |
Monthly |
Quarterly |
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Academic deans/directors |
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Academic departments |
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Athletics department |
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Campus police/security department |
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Counseling center |
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Disciplinary/judicial office or board |
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Faculty Senate |
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Faith-based services |
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Greek affairs |
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Health center |
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Human resources |
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Men’s anti-violence groups |
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President of the institution |
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Residential life |
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Student affairs (multicultural center, career services) |
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Student groups |
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Student sSenate |
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Victim services |
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Victim/survivor groups |
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Women’s center |
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Women’s anti-violence groups |
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Other (specify): _____________________ |
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23. 21 (Optional) Additional information (Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of your Ccampus-based CCR coordinated community response (CCR) activities and to provide any additional information you would like to share about your Ccampus-based CCR activities beyond what you have provided in the data above. Examples might include improved information to victims regarding available resources and greater coordination between departments on campus.)
2 4252 3. Coordinated community-based response activities supported by Campus Program funds during the current reporting period (Check the appropriate boxes to indicate the community-based agencies, organizations, or groups, even if they are not partners with which you have an external memorandum of understanding [EMOU], that you provided victim/survivor referrals to, received referrals from, engaged in consultation with, provided technical assistance to, and/or attended meetings with, according to the usual frequency of the interactions. If the interactions were not part of a regular schedule, you will need to estimate the frequency with which these interactions occurred during the current reporting period. If Campus Program-funded staff participated in a task force or work group, indicate that under “Meetings” by checking the frequency of the meetings and the types of organizations participating. In the last column, indicate the community-based agencies, organizations, or groups with which you have an EMOU for purposes of the Campus Program grant.)
Community-based agency/organization/ group |
Victim/survivor referrals, consultations, technical assistance |
Meetings |
EMOU partner |
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Daily |
Weekly |
Monthly |
Weekly |
Monthly |
Quarterly |
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Advocacy organization (NAACP, LGBTQ organization) |
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Batterer iIntervention pProgram |
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Community advocacy organization (NAACP, LGBTQ organization) |
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Court |
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Domestic violence programorganization |
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Dual sexual assault and domestic violence program organization |
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Educational institutions/organizations |
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Faith/spiritual-based organization |
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Government agency (vocational rehabilitation, food stamps, TANF) |
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Health/mental health organization |
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Law enforcement (excluding campus police/security) |
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Legal organization (legal services, bar association, law school) |
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Prosecutor’s office |
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Sexual assault organization oroorganization
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Sexual Assault Response Team |
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Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner |
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Sex offender treatment program |
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Social service organization |
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Community task force |
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Tribal government/tTribal government agency |
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Other (specify): __________________________________ |
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24A. Number of communities with improved CCR capacity (Provide the number of communities that have improved their capacity to respond to domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking as the result of the coordinated community response activities described above. For purposes of this question, a community may be defined as a city or town that you serve; in larger metropolitan areas a “community” may be a neighborhood or borough.)
Number of communities _______
2125. (Optional) Additional information (Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of your Ccommunity-based CCR activities and to provide any additional information you would like to share about your Ccommunity-based CCR activities beyond what you have provided in the data above. Examples might include an improved response to victims of domestic violence following meetings of a regional task force; improved information to victims regarding resources and greater coordination between the campus and the local victim services agency as thea result of meetings between campus and community advocates.)
C2. Policies
W ere your Campus Program funds used to develop, substantially revise, or implement policies or protocols during the current reporting period? Check yes if Campus Program-funded staff developed, substantially revised, or implemented policies or protocols, or if Campus Program funds directly supported the development, revision, or implementation of policies or protocols.
Yes--answer question 26-27
No--skip to C3
2 6246. Types of policies or protocols developed, substantially revised, or implemented during the current reporting period (Check all the types of policies or protocols developed, substantially revised, or implemented during the current reporting period. Check all that apply.)
Law enforcement
Campus based |
Community based |
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Appropriate response to underserved populations |
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Identifying primary aggressor/discouraging dual arrest |
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Immediate access to protection order information |
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Mandatory training on sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking |
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Procedures for anonymous, confidential, or Jane Doe reporting of sexual assault |
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Sexual assault response and protocols |
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Policies to protect victims from internet disclosure of identifying information |
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No charge to victim/survivors for any costs related to the prosecution of sexual assault, domestic violence/dating violence, and/or stalking |
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No charge to sexual assault victim/survivor for any costs associated with forensic exam |
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No victims polygraphed |
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Pro-arrest/mandatory arrest |
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Protection order enforcement (including full faith and credit) |
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Providing information to victims/survivors about victim services |
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Other (specify): _____________ |
Victim services
Campus based |
Community based |
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Appropriate services for underserved populations |
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Appropriate response to victim/survivors with substance abuse issues and /or mental health diagnoses |
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Confidentiality |
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Disciplinary policy and procedures |
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Mandatory training standards for staff and volunteers |
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Protocols with campus police/security |
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Staff, board, and/or volunteers represent the diversity of your service area |
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Procedures for anonymous, confidential, or Jane Doe reporting of sexual assault |
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Victim/survivor informed about Crime Victims Compensation and vVictim iImpact sStatements |
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Other (specify): |
Health care
Campus based |
Community based |
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Advocate response to emergency room/campus health center |
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Appropriate response to underserved populations |
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Forensic evidence collection and documentation |
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Mandatory training on sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking |
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Routine screening and referrals for sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking |
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Other (specify):____________________ |
Judicial/disciplinary board (campus- based)
Accelerated hearing schedules
Appropriate response to underserved populations
Confidentiality
Mandatory training on sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking
Discouraging mediation
Procedures for disciplinary hearing security
Sanctions
Victim notification
Other (specify):
Justice system (community- based)
Civil court procedures
Criminal court procedures
Decreasing dual arrests/identifying predominant aggressor
Domestic violence/dating violence statutes/codes
Firearms and domestic violence/dating violence
Judicial response
Law enforcement response
Pro-arrest policies
Prosecution response
Protection orders (including full faith and credit)
Sexual assault response and protocols
Sexual assault statutes/codes
Stalking statutes/codes
Other (specify): _______________________
Student conduct code
Dating violence policy
Domestic violence policy
Sexual assault policySexual assault policy
Sexual harassment policy
Stalking policy
Other (specify): ________________________________
Campus response
Cleary Act reporting
Data collection
Coordinated campus/community response
Response teams (DART, DVRT, SART)
Sexual assault response and protocols
Other (specify): ______________________
27. (Optional) Additional information (Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of policies you have developed or implemented and to provide any additional information you would like to share about your activities relating to the developing, revising or implementing of policies beyond what you have provided in the data above.)
C23. Training
W ere your Campus Program funds used for training during the current reporting period? Check yes if Campus Program-funded staff provided training or if grant funds directly supported the training. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, response in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Yes--answer questions 257-302827-3031
No--skip to C43
For the purposes of this reporting form, training is providing information on sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking that enables a person professionals to improve their response to victims/survivors as it relates to their role in the system. Education is providing general information that will increase public awareness of sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, ,dating violence, or stalking. In this subsection, report information on training activities. Report education activities in subsection C43.
28257. Training events provided (Report the total number of training events provided with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Exclude those events reported in subsection C1, Minimum Requirements, where you report on events provided for incoming students and campus police/security and judicial disciplinary board members. Staff development Ttraining provided to Campus Program-funded staff should not be counted.)
Total number of training events provided
28. Do you evaluate training events with pre- and/or post-tests? (Check only one answer. If you conduct such tests, discuss results in question 55.)
Always
Most of the time
Some of the time
Rarely
Never
29269. Number of people trained (Report the number of people trained with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Use the category that is most descriptive of the people attending the training event. Exclude those reported in subsection C1. Campus Program-funded staff attending training events should not be counted as people trained. If you are unable to report do not know how many people to report in specific categories, because of lack of information, you may report the overall number in “Multidisciplinary,” but this category should be used only as a last resort. Students, community members, and victims should not be reported as people trained, since they are not professionals responding to victims.)
People trained |
Number |
Advocacy organization staff (NAACP, LGBTQ organization) |
|
Attorneys/law students |
|
Batterer iIntervention pProgram staff |
|
Community advocacy organization staff (NAACP, LGBTQ organization) |
|
Educators (teachers, administrators, etc.) |
|
Faculty/staff |
|
Faith-based organization staff |
|
Health professionals (doctors, nurses, health center staff) |
|
Law enforcement officers |
|
Mental health professionals |
|
Multidisciplinary (various disciplines at same training) (use only as a last resort if you do not have complete information on attendees)group |
|
Peer educators |
|
Pre-professional students (students who will serve victims in a professional capacity upon completion of their program, i.e.., e.g., Social Work, Medical, Psychology students) |
|
Sex offender management/sex offender treatment providers |
|
Social service organization staff (non-governmental, e.g., food bank, homeless shelter) |
|
Student affairs staff (residential life, multicultural center, disability organization, LGBTQ) |
|
Victim advocates (includes domestic violence, sexual assault, dual) |
|
Victim advocates (sexual assault) |
|
Victim advocates (dual--sexual assault and domestic violence) |
|
Volunteers |
|
Other (specify): ___________________________________________________ |
|
TOTAL |
|
3 0302 7. Training content areas (Indicate all topics covered in training events provided by your Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Do not include staff development training events attended by Campus Program-funded staff. Check all that apply.)
Sexual assault, domestic violence, and dating violence,
and stalking
Confidentiality
Dating violence overview, dynamics, and services
Domestic violence overview, dynamics, and services
Drug-facilitated sexual assault
Safety planning for victims/survivors
Sexual assault overview, dynamics, and services
Sexual harassment overview, dynamics, and services
Stalking overview, dynamics, and services services
Response to victims/survivors who are incarcerated
Response to victims/survivors who have been trafficked
Other (specify): _____________________
Justice and disciplinary systems
Campus police/security response
Civil court procedures
Criminal court procedures
Disciplinary/judicial board response
Domestic violence statutes/codes
Firearms and domestic violence
Identifying predominant aggressor/ decreasing dual arrests
Judicial response
Mandatory reporting requirements
Pro-arrest policies
Protection orders (including full faith and credit)
Sexual assault statutes/codes
Stalking statutes/codes
Other (specify): _______________________
Underserved populations
Issues specific to victims/survivors who:
live in rural areas
are American Indian or Alaska Native
are Asian
are black or African American
are disabled
are elderly
are Hispanic or Latino
are homeless or living in poverty
are immigrants, refugees, or asylum seekers
are international students
are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or intersex
are Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander
are non-traditional or older students
have disabilities
have limited English proficiency
have mental health problems issues
have substance abuse problems issues
live in rural areas
are non-traditional or older students
are international students
Other (specify):
Campus and community response
Clery Act reporting
Community response to sexual assault
Coordinated community response
Response teams (DART, DVRT, SART)
Technology
Other (specify): _____________________
3116. (Optional) Additional information (Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of your training activities and to provide any additional information you would like to share about your training activities beyond what you have provided in the data above. Examples might include improved system response to victims with disabilities following a multidisciplinary training on issues specific to victims/survivors with disabilities, or greater awareness and reporting of drug-facilitated sexual assault.)
C34. Campus Education
W ere your Campus Program funds used for campus education (outreach events, public awareness, and/or prevention activities) during the current reporting period? Check yes if Campus Program-funded staff were used to support campus education or if Campus Program funds directly supported campus education. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Yes--answer questions 32-34353128-35 30
No--skip to C4 5
For the purposes of this reporting form, education means providing general information that will increase public awareness of sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, or stalking. In this subsection, report information on prevention activities and education programs. Training means providing information on sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking that enables a person professionals to improve their response to victims/survivors as it relates to their role in the system. In this subsection, report information on education activities. ReportT training activities should be reported in subsection C23..
323128. Outreach Education activities (Indicate the outreach activities supported with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Check all that apply.) [discuss whether this question should be called “Prevention and education activities”, rather than “outreach and education,” or should add prevention as a third. See the next question—29,]
ActivitiesEvents |
|
|
Clothesline Project |
|
|
Concerts |
|
|
Domestic Violence Awareness Month |
|
|
Media campaigns (press conferences, public service announcements, articles) |
|
|
Rallies/Speak Outs |
|
|
Sexual Assault Awareness Month |
|
|
Silent Witnesses |
|
|
Stalking Awareness Month |
|
|
Tabling at public events |
|
|
Take Back the Night March |
|
|
Theater productions |
|
|
Video series |
|
|
Vigils |
|
|
Women’s History Month activities |
|
|
Other (specify): _____________________________________________ |
|
32. Prevention and education program events provided (Report the total number of prevention and education program events provided during the current reporting period that were either provided by Campus Program-funded staff or directly supported by Campus Program funds. Exclude the prevention and education program events for incoming students reported in subsection C1. Do not count outreach events reported in item 31.)
Total number of prevention and education program events provided ___________
Activities |
Sexual assault |
Domestic violence/dating violence |
Stalking |
Community organizing/community events (rallies, speak outs, take back the night, vigils) |
|
|
|
Educational exhibits (clothesline project, silent witness, information tables) |
|
|
|
Media campaigns (press conferences, public service announcements, articles) |
|
|
|
Productions for public awareness (video series, theater productions) |
|
|
|
Other (specify):
|
|
|
|
3 3332 9. Prevention and eEducation program attendees (Report the number of people attending prevention and education program events provided with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Use the category that is most descriptive of the people attending the prevention or education program event. Exclude those reported in subsection C1.)
People attending |
Number |
Institution administrators (Provost, President) |
|
Academic deans/directors |
|
Athletics staff (including athletes, coaches, athletics department)Varsity athletes |
|
Faculty/staff |
|
Fraternity/sSorority members |
|
Men’s group participants |
|
Parents of students |
|
Residential life staff |
|
Student affairs staff (multicultural center, LGBTQ center, career services) |
|
Students (cClub sports, intramurals, classroom, non-traditional, international, etc., excluding those in section C1) |
|
Victims/survivors |
|
Women’s group participants |
|
Community members/general public |
|
Other (specify): ___________________________________________________ |
|
TOTAL |
|
34304. Topics of prevention and education programs (Indicate all topics addressed in prevention and education programs provided with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Check all that apply.)
Dating violence prevention
Domestic violence prevention
Self-defense ?
Sexual assault prevention
Sexual harassment prevention
Stalking prevention
Dating violence overview, dynamics, and services
Domestic violence overview, dynamics, and services
Sexual assault overview, dynamics, and services
Sexual harassment overview, dynamics, and services
Stalking overview, dynamics, and services
Other (specify): _________________________
3539. (Optional) Additional Iinformation Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of your outreach and education activities and to provide any additional information you would like to share about those activities beyond what you have provided in the data above. Examples might include a marked increase in calls from victims of sexual violence to your hotline following a Take Back the Night rally held on the campus commons, or during a Clotheslines Project exhibition.
35. Do you evaluate prevention and education program events with pre- and/or post-tests? (Check only one answer. If you conduct such tests, discuss results in question 55.)
Always
Most of the time
Some of the time
Rarely
Never
C45. Products
Were your Campus Program funds used to develop, substantially revise, or distribute products during the current reporting period? Check yes if Campus Program-funded staff developed, substantially revised, or distributed products or if Campus Program funds directly supported the development, revision, or distribution of products. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Yes--answer question 3616 31
No--skip to C65
363631. Use of Campus Program funds for product development, substantial revision, or distribution (Report the number of products developed, substantially revised, or distributed with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Report the number of new products developed or substantially revised during the current reporting period; the title/topic and intended audience for each product developed, revised, or distributed; and the number of products used or distributed. If a product was created in or translated into a language other than English, including Braille, indicate the language. Report on products that were newly developed or revised during the current reporting period whether or not they were used or distributed, and on products that were previously developed or revised but used or distributed during the current reporting period. Do not report the number of products printed or copied; only report the number developed or revised—in most cases that number will be one for each product described —and/or the number used or distributed. See separate instructions for examples of how to report under “developed or revised” and “used or distributed.”) need to have campus database updated so the numbers are reported the right way; also some variable names need to be corrected
Products |
Number developed or revised |
Title/topic |
Intended audience |
Number used or distributed |
Other languages |
Brochures |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Manuals |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Newsletter |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Posters |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Promotional products (wallet cards, key rings, whistles, etc.) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Training materials (power point presentations, theatre scripts, etc.) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Training curricula |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Web site (indicate the number of page views in the number used or distributed column) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other (specify): _________________ |
|
|
|
|
|
C56. Data Collection and Communication Systems
W ere your Campus Program funds used for data collection systems or communication systems or for the purchase of hardware or other equipment during the current reporting period? Check yes if Campus Program funds or Campus program-funded staff were used to develop, install, or expand data collection and/or communication systems. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Yes--answer questions 37-38327-338
No--skip to C67
37327. Use of Campus Program funds for data collection and/or communication systems (Indicate whether Campus Program grant funds were used to develop, install, link or expand data collection and/or communication systems, or purchase computers or other equipment during the current reporting period. Check all that apply.)
Develop data collection/communication systems
Install data collection/communication systems
Expand existing data collection/communication systems
Link existing data collection/communication systems with local law enforcement
Share information with other community partners
Manage data collection and communication
Purchase computers and other equipment
38338. Purpose of data collection and/or communication systems (Indicate all types of information identified or tracked with this technology by checking all that apply.)
Arrests
Case management
Compliance with judicial/disciplinary board-ordered sanctions
Convictions
Evaluation/outcome measures
Incident reports
Judicial/disciplinary board conditions/violations
Judicial/disciplinary board hearing schedules
Prosecutions
Protection orders
Recidivism
Sentencing
Stalking and harassment orders
Victim notification
Victim service availability
Violations of protection orders
Other (specify):
C67. System and Capital Improvement
Were your Campus Program funds used for system and/or capital improvement (but not including construction of buildings) during the current reporting period? Check yes if Campus Program-funded staff engaged in system and/or capital improvement activities (but not including construction of buildings) or if Campus Program funds directly supported system (e.g., interpreters, evaluations, language lines) and/or capital improvements (e.g. improved lighting, emergency call boxes). If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.
Yes--answer questions 39--40349-40 35
No--skip to Section D
39349. Use of Campus Program funds for system improvement (Indicate the system improvement activities supported with your Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Check all that apply.)
|
Victim services |
Campus police/security |
Judicial/disciplinary board |
Evaluation |
|
|
|
Interpreters |
|
|
|
Language lines |
|
|
|
Translation of forms and documents |
|
|
|
Other (specify): ____________________________ |
|
|
|
404035. Use of Campus Program funds for capital improvements (Indicate the capital improvements supported with Campus Program funds during the current reporting period. Capital improvements do not include the construction of buildings. Check all that apply.)
Capital improvements |
|
Emergency call boxes |
|
Landscape design for security |
|
Lighting |
|
Security cameras |
|
Other (specify): __________________________ |
|
38. (Optional) Additional information (Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of your system and capital improvements and to provide any additional information you would like to share beyond what you have provided about system and capital improvements in the data above. For example, if you have seen an increase in reporting as result of funding interpreters or language lines you may provide that information here.)
D . VICTIM SERVICES
Were your Campus Program funds used to provide victim services to victims/survivors during the current reporting period? Check yes if Campus Program-funded staff provided victim services or if Campus Program funds were used to support victim services during the current reporting period. (If the grant funds a consortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Yes--answer questions 411-4841-47
No--—if no, please explain in box below, and then skip to Section E
414136. Number of victims/survivors served, partially served, and victims/survivors seeking services who were not served Please do not answer this question without referring to the separate instructions for further explanation and examples of how to distinguish among these categories.
(Report the following, to the best of your ability, as an unduplicated count for each category during the current reporting period. This means that each victim/survivor who was seekingsought or who received services during the current reporting period should be counted only once and in only one of the listed categories. For the purposes of this question, victims/survivors are those against whom the sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, and/or stalking was directed. If the victim/survivor presented with more than one victimization, that person should be counted only once under the primary victimization. If you report victims/survivors as partially served or not served, please indicate reasons in the two tables below.)
|
Sexual assault |
Dating/ Domestic violence/dating violence |
Stalking |
TOTAL |
A. Served: Victims/survivors who received the service(s) they requestedneeded, if those services were were funded byprovided under your Campus Program grant |
|
|
|
|
B. Partially served: Victims/survivors who received some service(s), but not all of the services they requestedneeded, if those services were funded byprovided under your Campus Program grant |
|
|
|
|
TOTAL SERVED AND PARTIALLY SERVEDRECeiving Services (41A+B) |
|
|
|
|
C. Victims/survivors seeking services who were not served: Victims/survivors who sought services and did not receive the service(s) they were seekingneeded, if those services were funded byprovided under your Campus Program grant |
|
|
|
|
Total Seeking Services (36A+B+C) |
|
|
|
|
42. Reasons that victims/survivors seeking services were not served or were partially served (Check all that apply.)
|
Reasons not served or partially served |
|
Program reached capacity |
|
Need not documented |
|
Did not meet eligibility or statutory requirements |
|
Program rules not acceptable to victim/survivor |
|
Services not appropriate for victim/survivor |
|
Transportation problems |
|
Conflict of interest |
|
Services inappropriate or inadequate for victims/survivors with substance abuse problems |
|
Services inappropriate or inadequate for victims/survivors with mental health problems |
|
Insufficient/lack of adequate language capacity (including sign language) |
|
Geographic or other isolation of victim/survivor |
|
Hours of operation |
|
Insufficient/lack of culturally appropriate services |
|
Insufficient/lack of services for people with disabilities |
|
Other (specify): _______________________________________________ |
|
Reasons not served or partially served |
|
Conflict of interest |
|
Did not meet statutory requirements |
|
Hours of operation |
|
Inadequate language capacity (including sign language)Insufficient/lack of culturally appropriate services |
|
Insufficient/lack of culturally appropriate services Insufficient/lack of language capacity (including sign language) |
|
Insufficient/lack of services for people with disabilities |
|
Lack of child care |
|
Program reached capacity |
|
Program rules not acceptable to victim/survivor |
|
Services inappropriate or inadequate for victims/survivors with substance abuse issuesServices inappropriate or inadequate for victims/survivors with mental health issues |
|
Services inappropriate or inadequate for victims/survivors with mental health issuesServices inappropriate or inadequate for victims/survivors with substance abuse issues |
|
Services not appropriate for victim/survivor |
|
Transportation |
|
Other (specify): _______________________________________________ |
4343. Demographics of victims/survivors served or partially served (Based on the victims/survivors reported in 4141A and 4141B, report the total numbers for all that apply. This should be an unduplicated count for “gender” and “age”. Total number of race/ethnicity reported should be at least as many reported as the total of 41 A+B, and may exceed that total. Because victims/survivors may identify in more than one category of race/ethnicity, the total for “Race/Ethnicity” may exceed the total number of victims/survivors reported in 41A and 41B. However, the total number of victims/survivors reported under Race/Ethnicity should not be less than the total number of victims/survivors reported in 41A and 41B. The total number of victims/survivors reported under “Gender” and the total number reported under “Age” should equal the total number of victims/survivors reported in 41A and 41B. Those victims/survivors for whom gender, age, and/or race/ethnicity are not known should be reported in the “unknown” category.)
|
Number of victims/survivors |
Race/Ethnicity (victims/survivors shouldmay be counted once for each category of race/ethnicity that applies) |
|
Black or African American |
|
American Indian and Alaska Native |
|
Asian |
|
Black or African American |
|
Hispanic or Latino |
|
Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander |
|
Hispanic or Latino |
|
White |
|
Unknown |
|
TOTAL RACE/ETHNICITY(should not be less than the sum ofbe equal to, or greater than, 41A andplus 41B)Unknown |
|
Gender |
|
Female |
|
Male |
|
Unknown |
|
TOTAL GENDER(should equal the sum of 4141A and 4141B) |
|
Age |
|
0-127 |
|
13-17 |
|
18-24 |
|
25-59 |
|
60+ |
|
Unknown |
|
TOTAL AGE(should equal the sum of 4141A and 4141B) |
|
Other demographics |
|
People with disabilities |
|
People with limited English proficiency |
|
People who are immigrants/refugees/asylum seekers |
|
People who live in rural areas |
|
444. Victims/survivors’ relationship to offender (For those victims/survivors reported as served and partially served in 4141A and 4141B, report the victim/survivor’s
relationship of the victim/survivor to the offender, by type of victimization. If a victim/survivor experienced more than one type of victimization and/or was victimized by more than one perpetrator, count the victim/survivor in all categories that apply. The total number of relationships in the sexual assault column must be at least [insert sum of sexual assault victims reported in 4136A and 4136B]; the total number in the domestic violence/dating violence column must be at least [insert sum of domestic violence victims reported in 4136A and 4136B]; and the total number in the stalking column must be at least [insert sum of stalking victims reported in 4136A and 4136B]. The total number of relationships reported for each victimization must be equal to or greater than the number of victims reported in 36A and 36B for that victimization.)
The number of victims/survivors reported here may total more than the sum of 41A and 41B.)
Victims/survivors’ Rrelationship to offender |
Number of victim/survivor relationships
|
|||
Sexual assault |
Domestic violence/Dating violence |
Stalking |
||
Current or former spouse or intimate partner |
|
|
|
|
Other family or household member (in-law, grandparent, etc.) |
|
|
|
|
Acquaintance (friend, neighbor, employere, co-worker, classschoolmate, , professorstudentteacher, etc.) |
|
|
|
|
Current or former dDating relationship |
|
|
|
|
Stranger |
|
|
|
|
Relationship unknown |
|
|
|
|
Other (specify): ____________________________________ |
|
|
|
|
TOTAL |
|
|
|
455. Victim services (Report the number of primary victims/survivors from 4136A and 4136B who received Campus Program-funded services. Count each victim/survivor only once for each type of service that the victim received during the current reporting period; do not report the number of times that service was provided to the victim. The total for each type of service should not be higher than the total of 4136A and 4136B [insert total of 4136 A and 4136 B.]Report the number of victims/survivors from 4136A and 4136B provided with victim advocacy; face-to-face crisis intervention; hotline call assistance; support group; counseling services; hospital response; legal advocacy or court accompaniment; civil legal assistance; disciplinary board advocacy; and housing assistance. A victim/survivor may be counted once for each type of service received during the current reporting period. The numbers of victims/survivors reported here may total more than the sum of 41A and 41B.)Count each victim/survivor only once for each type of service received during the current reporting period, regardless of the number of times that service was provided to the victim. Report the number of victims receiving each service, not the number of times the service was provided.
Type of service |
Number of victims/survivors |
Victim advocacy (Actions designed to help the victim/survivor obtain needed support, resources, or services including employment, health care, victim’s compensation, etc.) |
|
Crisis intervention (Crisis intervention is a process by which a person identifies, assesses, and intervenes with an individual in crisis so as to restore balance and reduce the effects of the crisis in her/his life. In this category, report only crisis intervention that occurs in person.)
|
|
Academic/eEducation advocacy (Actions designed to help the victim/survivor obtain needed support, resources, or services including assistance with course scheduling, academic letter of support, etc.) |
|
Civil legal assistance (Civil legal services provided by an attorney and/or paralegal) |
|
Crisis intervention (Crisis intervention is a process by which a person identifies, assesses, and intervenes with an individual in crisis so as to restore balance and reduce the effects of the crisis in her/his life. In this category, report crisis intervention that occurs in person and/or over the telephone)
|
|
Disciplinary board advocacy (Assisting a victim/survivor with issues relating to campus disciplinary board actions such as preparation of statements, accompanying the victim/survivor to disciplinary board hearings, and all other advocacy relating to campus-based proceedings) |
|
Hotline calls (Crisis or information and referral calls received by a program’s hotline or office telephone.)
|
|
Hospital/clinic response/other medical response (Accompanying a victim/survivor to, or meeting a victim/survivor at a hospital, clinic, or medical office) |
|
Housing assistance (Assisting a victim/survivor with housing issues including finding a room in a different dorm or finding temporary housing either on- or off-campus; preventing access by the perpetrator to the victim/survivor's new residence) |
|
Legal advocacy/court accompaniment (Assisting a victim/survivor with legal issues including preparing paperwork such as victim impact statements, accompanying a victim/survivor to an administrative hearing, court proceeding, or law enforcement interview, and all other advocacy within the criminal or civil justice system. Services provided by an attorney and/or paralegal should be reported in civil legal assistance.) |
|
Support group/Ccounseling services (Individual or group counseling or support provided by a volunteer, peer, or professional.) |
|
Transportation |
|
Victim/survivor advocacy (Actions designed to assist the victim/survivor in obtaining support, resources, or services, including employment, health care, victim’s compensation, etc.) |
|
Hospital response (Accompanying or meeting a victim/survivor at the hospital, usually for a forensic exam.) |
|
Legal advocacy/Court accompaniment (Assisting a victim/survivor with legal issues including preparing paperwork such as victim impact statements, accompanying a victim/survivor to a court proceeding or law enforcement interview, and all other advocacy with the criminal or civil justice system.) |
|
Civil legal assistance (Civil legal services provided by an attorney.) |
|
Disciplinary board advocacy (Assisting a victim/survivor with issues relating to campus disciplinary board actions such as preparation of statements, accompanying the victim/survivor to disciplinary board hearings, and all other advocacy relating to campus-based proceedings.) |
|
Housing assistance (Assisting a victim/survivor with housing issues including finding a room in a different dorm or finding temporary housing either on- or off-campus; preventing access by the perpetrator to the victim/survivor's new residence.) |
|
Other (specify): _______________________________________________________ |
|
451A. Hotline/iInformation/rReferral services (Report the number of hotline calls received from victims, and the total number of hotline calls received, during the current reporting period. Victims whose calls are reported here should not be reported as victims served in Question 4136 unless they also received at least one of the services listed in Question 451 Victim Services. Victims who receive services such as crisis intervention or victim advocacy over the telephone should be reported in Question 415.)
Type of service |
Number of calls from victims |
Total number of calls |
Hotline calls (Crisis or information and referral calls received by an agency’s hotline or office telephone.) |
|
|
38. (Optional) Additional information (Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of your victim services and to provide any additional information you would like to share about your victim services activities beyond what you have provided in the data above. For example, if you have witnessed an increase in the number of victims/survivors who are able to remain in school and continue their education because of your academic and housing advocacy, you could report that here.)
466. Number of victims reporting crimes (Of the victims/survivors who sought services provided under your Campus Program grant, provide the number who reported crimes of sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence and/or stalking, to campus police/security or community law enforcement during the current reporting period.)
Where crime occurred |
Campus police/security |
Community law enforcement |
Total |
On-campus |
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Off-campus |
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Total |
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.47. (Optional) Additional information (Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of your victim services and to provide any additional information you would like to share about your victim services activities beyond what you have provided in the data above. For example, if you have witnessed an increase in the number of victims/survivors who are able to remain in school and continue their education because of your academic and housing advocacy, you could report that here.)
4 87. Protection orders (Report the total number of temporary and/or final protection orders requested and granted for which Campus Program-funded victim services staff provided assistance to victims/survivors during the current reporting period. These orders may also be referred to as restraining orders, anti-harassment orders, or no-contact or stay-away orders.)
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Temporary protection orders |
Final protection orders |
Number of sexual assault protection orders requested |
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Number of sexual assault protection orders granted |
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Number of domestic violence/dating violence protection orders requested |
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Number of domestic violence/dating violence protection orders granted |
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Number of stalking protection orders requested |
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Number of stalking protection orders granted |
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)
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Temporary protection orders |
Final protection orders |
Total |
Number of protection orders requested |
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Number of protection orders granted |
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Total |
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E . CAMPUS and COMMUNITY MEASURES
All grantees must complete this section. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses in this section should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
In this section, use the numbers from your Clery Act report to provide information for the entire campus or for the campuses represented in your consortiumconsortium or flagship project, to the extent that the information is available. This applies to all sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking offenses, as defined by question 10, that occurred on campus, or in or on noncampus buildings or property, and on public property, as defined by the Clery Act (20 U.S.C. § 1092(f)(6)), that were reported to campus security authorities or local law enforcement. Campus security authorities are not restricted to campus police/security officers. See page 17 of the separate instructions for the definitions of “campus” (to include noncampus buildings or property, and public property) and “campus security authorities” as defined by the Clery Act. See page 3 of the separate instructions for complete definitions of sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking.
498. Number of offenses reported (Report the number of sexual assault, domestic violence, /dating violence, and/or stalking offenses reported to campus security authorities, as defined by the Clery Act and supporting regulations, during the current reporting period.)
Type of offense |
Number of offenses reported |
Sexual assault |
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Domestic violence/ dating violence |
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Stalking |
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TOTAL |
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4509. Number of criminal offenses charged and campus disciplinary or judicial board actions (Report the number of offenses in which criminal charges were filed in the local jurisdiction and/or in which campus disciplinary/judicial board actions were held during the current reporting period.)
a. Number of offenses resulting in criminal charges being filed in the local jurisdiction ____________
b. Number of offenses resulting in campus disciplinary/judicial board actions ____________
5150. Dispositions of campus disciplinary or judicial board actions (Report the dispositions of all campus disciplinary or judicial actions resolved during the current reporting period.)
Type of offense |
Number dismissed |
Sanctions |
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Request of victim |
Lack of evidence |
Other |
Reprimand |
Suspension |
Expulsion |
Counseling |
Community service |
Other |
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Sexual assault |
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Domestic violence/dating violence |
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Stalking |
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TOTAL |
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52. (Optional) Additional information (Use the space below to discuss the effectiveness of your law enforcement and/or judicial and disciplinary board activities and to provide any additional information you would like to share about these activities beyond what you have provided in the data above.)
5153. Dispositions of criminal charges in local jurisdiction (Report the dispositions of all criminal charges filed in the local jurisdiction that were resolved during the current reporting period. [Deferred adjudication is a process in which the judge requires the defendant to adhere to certain terms, prior to any adjudication of guilt. If a defendant successfully completes those terms, the charges are dismissed.])
Type of offense |
Number dismissed |
Number of deferred adjudications |
Number convicted |
Number acquitted |
||||||
Request of victim |
Plea bargain |
Lack of evidence |
Other |
Guilty of highest |
Guilty of lesser |
Plead as charged |
Plead lesser |
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Sexual assault |
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Domestic/dating violence |
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Stalking |
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TOTAL |
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F. NARRATIVE
All grantees must answer question 5452. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, response to this question should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Please limit your response to four pages for this question.
5452. Report on the status of your Campus Program grant goals and objectives as of the end of the current reporting period. (RUsing Appendix A as a guide, report succinctly on the status of the goals and objectives for your grant as of the end of the current reporting period, as they were identified in your grant proposal or as they have been added or revised. Indicate whether the activities related to your objectives for the current reporting period have been completed, are in progress, are delayed, or have been revised. Comment briefly on your successes and challenges, and provide any additional explanation you feel is necessary for us to understand what you have or have not accomplished relative to your goals and objectives. If you have not accomplished objectives that should have been accomplished during the current reporting period, you must provide an explanation.)
All grantees must answer questions 53 55 and 564 on an annual basis. Submit this information on the January to June reporting form only. (If the grant funds a consortiumconsortium or flagship project, responses to these questions should reflect the aggregated responses of consortiumproject members.)
Please limit your response to two pages for each question.
Questions 575 and 58is are optional.
Please limit your response to two pages for thisese questions.
575. Provide additional information that you would like us to know about your Campus Program and/or the effectiveness of your grant. (If you have any other data or information that you have not already reported in answer to previous questions that demonstrate the effectiveness of your Campus Program-funded program, please provide it below. Refer to separate instructions for a fuller explanation and example.If you feel that the data you have provided does not fully or accurately reflect the effectiveness of your Campus Program or grant-funded activities, you may wish to provide supplemental data. If you have not already done so elsewhere on this form, Ffeel free to discuss any of the following: institutionalization of staff positions, policies, and/or protocols, systems-level changes, community collaboration, results of pre-tests and post-tests, the removal or reduction of barriers and challenges for victims/survivors, utilization of volunteers and/or interns to complete activities, promising practices, and positive or negative unintended consequences.)
528. Provide any additional information that you would like us to know about the data submitted. (If you have any information that could be helpful in understanding the data you have submitted in this report, please answer this question. For example, if you submitted two different progress reports for the same reporting period, you may explain how the data was apportioned to each report;or if you did not report staff or activities, you may explain why.) or if you funded staff—e.g., victim advocates, law enforcement officers, etc--but.-- but did not report any corresponding victim services or law enforcement activities, you may explain why; or if you did not use program funds to support either staff or activities during the reporting period, please explain how program funds were used, if you have not already done so.)
Public Reporting Burden
Paperwork Reduction Act Notice. Under the Paperwork Reduction Act, a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. We try to create forms and instructions that are accurate, can be easily understood, and which impose the least possible burden on you to provide us with information. The estimated average time to complete and file this form is 60 minutes per form. If you have comments regarding the accuracy of this estimate, or suggestions for making this form simpler, you can write to the Office on Violence Against Women, U.S. Department of Justice, 810 7th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20531.
APPENDIX A
Goals/Objectives (Describe your goals and objectives, as outlined in your grant proposal, or as revised – Question #52) |
Key Activities |
Status (completed, in progress, delayed, revised) |
Comments (successes, challenges, explanations) |
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File Type | application/msword |
File Title | OFFICE ON VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN |
Last Modified By | catherine m. poston |
File Modified | 2008-04-15 |
File Created | 2008-04-15 |