Marshalltown DVA/SAC will no longer serve Jasper County come July

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The Domestic Violence Alternatives and Sexual Assault Center located in Marshalltown has served victims of sexual assault and domestic violence in Jasper County since 1985. However, as a result of cuts to funding and a subsequent reorganization of the Crime Victim Assistance Division of the Iowa Attorney General’s Office, DVA/SAC will no longer serve Jasper County effective July 1, 2013.

Cuts totalling $1.1 million already have been applied to CVAD’s budget, with funding expected to decrease by another million dollars over the next fiscal year, DVA/SAC executive director Dotti Thompson explained during a public meeting held at the Newton Public Library on Tuesday afternoon.

As a result, the state has been divided into six regions, with the 28 programs currently in place across Iowa eventually consolidating into 12-15 programs. This, paired with an initiative to shift both focus and money more toward outreach as opposed to shelters, will help programs statewide continue to operate despite recent budget cuts.

DVA/SAC currently serves victims in Marshall, Poweshiek, Tama and Jasper counties, and will continue to have a presence in each until July 1 of next year.

Both Marshall and Tama counties have been designated a portion of the North Central region, which stretches northward to the state line. Because DVA/SAC is located in Marshalltown, its services will only be available to those within that region. Jasper and Poweshiek counties have thus been assigned to the South Central region, which reaches westward to Polk County and south to the state line.

Jasper County is one of seven counties statewide that must find a new agency to provide sexual assault and domestic violence response services to victims as a result of the newly-formed regions; Poweshiek, Sac, Calhoun, Carroll, Crawford, Hardin and Grundy counties will all face similar decisions over the next seven months.

Residents of these counties need not worry, Thompson explained, because of state guidelines that require each region to develop comprehensive programs in each county it covers before receiving funding.

“Our goal is to ensure that our victims in even the most rural areas receive the same services as those in our most populous areas,” she added.

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