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You are here: Home / Grant Duration>1 Year / Federal S.T.O.P. Violence Against Women Grant – Kansas

Federal S.T.O.P. Violence Against Women Grant – Kansas

Dated: November 8, 2024

The Federal S.T.O.P. Violence Against Women Grant aims to develop and strengthen effective law enforcement and prosecution strategies to combat violent crimes against women and to develop victim services in cases involving violent crimes against women.

Donor Name: Kansas Governor’s Grants Program (KGGP)

State: Kansas

County: All Counties

Type of Grant: Grant

Deadline: 12/10/2024

Size of the Grant: More than $1 million

Grant Duration: 1 Year

Details:

Grant funds must be distributed to sub-grant programs as follows:

  • 25% of the funds for law enforcement agencies
  • 25% for prosecution
  • 5% to courts
  • 30% for nonprofit victim service organizations.

Funding Information

The amount of funds available for grant awards is approximately $3.5 million. Grant projects funded by this S.T.O.P. VAWA grant program shall be for a period of 12 months from January 1, 2025, to December 31, 2025.

Uses of funds 

S.T.O.P. VAWA funds should be used for projects that serve or focus on adult and youth (age 11-24) women and girls who are victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking. In general, victims served with S.T.O.P. VAWA funds must be adults or youth. S.T.O.P. VAWA funds may also support “complementary new initiatives and emergency services for victims and their families.” For example, S.T.O.P. VAWA funds may support services for secondary victims such as children who witness domestic violence.

Grant funds may only be used for one or more of the following federal grant project purposes:

  • Training law enforcement officers, judges, other court personnel, and prosecutors to more effectively identify and respond to violent crimes against women, including the crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking, including the appropriate use of nonimmigrant status under subparagraphs (T) and (U) of section 101(a)(15) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. §1101(a)).
  • Developing, training, or expanding units of law enforcement officers, judges, other court personnel, and prosecutors specifically targeting violent crimes against women, including the crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.
  • Developing and implementing more effective police, court, and prosecution policies, protocols, orders, and services specifically devoted to preventing, identifying, and responding to violent crimes against women, including the crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking, as well as the appropriate treatment of victims.
  • Developing, installing, or expanding data collection and communication systems, including computerized systems, linking police, prosecutors, and courts or for the purpose of identifying, classifying, and tracking arrests, protection orders, violations of protection orders, prosecutions, and convictions for violent crimes against women, including the crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.
  • Developing, enlarging, or strengthening victim services and legal assistance programs, including domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking programs, developing or improving delivery of victim services and legal assistance to underserved populations, providing specialized domestic violence court advocates in courts where a significant number of protection orders are granted, and increasing reporting and reducing attrition rates for cases involving violent crimes against women, including crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.
  • Developing, enlarging, or strengthening programs addressing the needs and circumstances of Indian tribes in dealing with violent crimes against women, including the crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.
  • Supporting formal and informal statewide, multidisciplinary efforts, to the extent not supported by state funds, to coordinate the response of state law enforcement agencies, prosecutors, courts, victim services agencies, and other state agencies and departments, to violent crimes against women, including the crimes of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.
  • Training of sexual assault forensic medical personnel examiners in the collection and preservation of evidence, analysis, prevention, and providing expert testimony and treatment of trauma related to sexual assault.
  • Developing, enlarging, or strengthening programs to assist law enforcement, prosecutors, courts, and others to address the needs and circumstances of individuals 50 years of age or over, individuals with disabilities, and Deaf individuals who are victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking, including recognizing, investigating, and prosecuting instances of such violence or assault and targeting outreach and support, counseling, legal assistance, and other victim services to such individuals.
  • Providing assistance to victims of domestic violence and sexual assault in immigration matters.
  • Maintaining core victim services and criminal justice initiatives, while supporting complementary new initiatives and emergency services for victims and their families including rehabilitative work with offenders.
  • Supporting the placement of special victim assistants (to be known as “Jessica Gonzales Victim Assistants”) in local law enforcement agencies to serve as liaisons between victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking and personnel in local law enforcement agencies in order to improve the enforcement of protection orders. Jessica Gonzales Victim Assistants shall have expertise in domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking and may undertake the following activities:
    • Developing, in collaboration with prosecutors, courts, and victim service providers, standardized response policies for local law enforcement agencies, including the use of evidence-based indicators to assess the risk of domestic and dating violence homicide and prioritize dangerous or potentially lethal cases;
    • Notifying persons seeking enforcement of protection orders as to what responses will be provided by the relevant law enforcement agency;
    • Referring persons seeking enforcement of protection orders to supplementary services (such as emergency shelter programs, hotlines, or legal assistance services); and
    • Taking other appropriate action to assist or secure the safety of the person seeking enforcement of a protection order.
  • Providing funding to law enforcement agencies, nonprofit nongovernmental victim services providers, and state, tribal, territorial, and local governments (to be known as the Crystal Judson Domestic Violence Protocol Program) to promote:
    • Development and implementation of training for local victim domestic violence service providers, and to fund victim services personnel, to be known as “Crystal Judson Victim Advocates,” to provide supportive services and advocacy for victims of domestic violence committed by law enforcement personnel;
    • Implementation of protocols within law enforcement agencies to ensure consistent and effective responses to the commission of domestic violence by personnel within such agencies such as the model policy promulgated by the International Association of Chiefs of Police (“Domestic Violence by Police Officers: A Policy of the IACP, Police Response to Violence Against Women Project” July 2003); and
    • Development of such protocols in collaboration with state, tribal, territorial, and local victim services providers and domestic violence coalitions.
  • Developing and promoting state, local, or tribal legislation and policies that enhance best practices for responding to domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.
  • Developing, implementing, or enhancing Sexual Assault Response Teams, or other similar coordinated community responses to sexual assault.
  • Developing and strengthening policies, protocols, best practices, and training for law enforcement agencies and prosecutors relating to the investigation and prosecution of sexual assault cases and the appropriate treatment of victims.
  • Developing, enlarging, or strengthening programs addressing sexual assault against men, women, and youth in correctional or detention settings. In particular, this will include ensuring the availability of advocacy services for those victims of sexual assault who are incarcerated that meet the standards issued under the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA), including accompaniment during forensic exams and investigatory interviews, crisis intervention, emotional support services, and referrals, as well as training for those advocates. For further information regarding the PREA standards, applicants may contact the Kansas Department of Corrections PREA Coordinator’s office at 785-291-3074.
  • Identifying and conducting inventories of backlogs of sexual assault evidence collection kits and developing protocols and policies for responding to and addressing such backlogs, including protocols and policies for notifying and involving victims.
  • Developing, enlarging, or strengthening programs and projects to provide services and responses targeting male and female victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking, whose ability to access traditional services and responses is affected by their sexual orientation or gender identity, as defined in section 249(c) of title 18, United States Code.
  • Developing, enhancing, or strengthening prevention and educational programming to address domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, stalking, or female genital mutilation or cutting; with not more than five percent of the amount allocated to a state to be used for this purpose.
  • Developing, enhancing, or strengthening programs and projects to improve evidence collection methods for victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking, including through funding or technology that better detects bruising and injuries across skin tones and related training.
  • Developing, enlarging, or strengthening culturally specific victim services programs to provide culturally specific victim services and responses to female genital mutilation or cutting.
  • Providing victim advocates in State or local law enforcement agencies, prosecutors’ offices, and courts and providing supportive services and advocacy to Indian victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.
  • Paying any fees charged by any governmental authority for furnishing a victim or the child of a victim with any of the following documents:
    • A birth certificate or passport of the individual, as required by law;
    • An identification card issued to the person by a state or Tribe, that shows that the person is a resident of the state or member of the Tribe.

Eligibility Criteria 

Funds are available to units of state or local government, Native American tribes, and nonprofit and faith-based organizations. A 25% non-federal cash or in-kind match is required for all projects, with the exception of awards made to victim service organizations and tribes.

For more information, visit KGGP.

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