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Task Forces & Caucuses

Task Forces:

Task Forces come together to address a shared area of concern related to the mission and goals of the Alliance. Any member can participate in any Task Force.

image of a gold ball Child Advocacy Task Force
image of a gold ball LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, & Questioning)
Task Force Description

Task Force Page
image of a gold ball Northern Virginia Task Force
image of a gold ball Social Justice Task Force
image of a gold ball Southwest Virginia Task Force
image of a gold ball Virginia Teen Dating Violence Prevention Task Force
image of a gold ball Wild Women of Wisdom Task Force

Caucuses:

Caucuses come together as a group of people who have not had equal access to full participation in society and/or in the coalition. For example, there have been Caucuses for violence survivors, for women of color, and for lesbians. Membership is limited to those who share the identity of the Caucus.


image of a gold ball Women of Color Caucus
image of a gold ball Survivor Caucus

Child Advocacy Task Force

The Child Advocacy Task Force is a statewide collaboration to promote a healthy environment free of sexual and domestic violence for all children.

Our multi-disciplinary task force formed in the Fall of 2006 in effort to identify issues faced by children and youth who have been exposed to sexual and domestic violence and to collaborate on the development of effective strategies, tools, and interventions to meet the needs of these often forgotten victims. The Child Advocacy Task Force has had representation from over 80 child advocates from every region of Virginia. Please join us to work on behalf of our children.

Here’s what the Child Advocacy Task Force is working on…

Conference Project : One Voice: Gathering the Village to End Domestic & Sexual Violence for ALL Children Conference on February 21, 2008 in Richmond, VA.

Toolkit Project: A handy manual of interventions and tools for supporting child survivors

Print Project: Published materials illustrating the effects of abuse on children

Contact us at: 804.377.0335

View a Power Point slide show for more information about the Task Force.

LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, & Questioning) Task Force

The LGBT Task Force was created in November 2003 to support LGBT organizations, domestic violence programs, and sexual assault crisis centers in Virginia to better outreach and serve LGBT individuals who are experiencing interpersonal violence through outreach, training and education. The goals of the LGBT Task Force are to increase the visibility of LGBT individuals who are experiencing intimate partner violence through building collaborations with LGBT organizations in Virginia and to provide training in each region of Virginia for domestic violence, sexual assault, and LGBT service providers.

Northern Virginia Task Force

The Northern Virginia Task Force of VSDVAA is comprised of Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault, and Dual Programs. The group meets quarterly to discuss individual program updates, current legal and policy trends in the Northern Virginia area, and is a space which provides support for the advocacy community in the region. Due to the region’s urban environment and jurisdictional closeness, the Task Force meetings are a time to collaborate, problem solve, and improve our response to victims of domestic and sexual violence.

Social Justice Task Force

Task Force Mission: The purpose of the Social Justice Task Force is to address the intersections of violence, racism, sexism, homophobia, economic injustice, and other oppressions in the lives of survivors of domestic and sexual violence and their children. This will be accomplished by promoting social change and individual and collective accountability in our work.

Goals:

1.) To actively raise difficult issues about oppressions which may lead us within the Alliance to challenge ourselves and each other and to question our own assumptions and actions

2). To raise and actively promote awareness about these issues in the Alliance membership, Sexual Assault Crisis Centers and Domestic Violence Programs

3). To actively promote racial equality and economic opportunities that include but are not limited to, access to healthcare and living wage jobs within our organizations and through the Commonwealth of Virginia

4.) To support and work collectively with other task forces and caucuses which address specific oppressions.

Vision: The Intersection of Oppressions

In order to promote substantive social change and effective service delivery, advocates must recognize and address the intersections of other forms of oppression with domestic violence and sexual assault (DV/SA). These other forms of oppressions include, but are not limited to, racism, sexism, homophobia, classism, ableism and ageism.

There are many ways to understand how the link between domestic and sexual violence and other oppressions operates. These perspectives are not mutually exclusive:

  • Layers of oppression make some people more vulnerable to DV and or/SA
  • DV/SA are sometimes used as tools of other oppressions (ex: homophobic man raping a woman because she is perceived to be a lesbian)
  • Some forms of oppression contribute directly to perpetuating DV and SA. (ex: lack of economic justice and a living wage keeping a woman in an abusive relationship because she cannot support her children without the abuser’s income)
  • DV and SA are forms of oppression in and of themselves. Victims of DV and SA are disempowered, judged, and marginalized because of the violence they have experienced.

People who have experienced DV and or/ SA and are also oppressed in other ways because of their race, class, sexuality, gender, etc. face multiple intersecting barriers to equality and safety. (ex: if an African American woman is raped by a white man, did sexism or racism or both contribute to her experience? What additional oppression might she face as she tries to recover or seek justice?) The fear has been expressed that “adding” an analysis of other oppressions to our work would take a way from the “real work” of addressing DV and SA. However, these other oppressions are already there and not separate in the lives of many people we serve (or should be serving). The Social Justice Task Force recognizes that survivors deserve to have all barriers they face understood and addressed comprehensively by service providers.

All oppressions, including DV/SA, are perpetuated by the belief that power must be power over, not shared power. If we really want to end DV/SA, we have to strive for equality and shared power. In order to accomplish this goal we must take a stand against all forms of oppression and modeling the values of equality and shared power in the way that we do our work. If you have questions about the meetings or the task force contact Lisa Furr.

Southwest Virginia Task Force

On August 2, 2004 programs from across Southwestern Virginia met to form a Task Force to be proposed to VSDVAA.  The group identified the following objectives:            

  • To provide a voice for historically oppressed and marginalized people of Southwest Virginia within the Alliance and society.
  • To provide a means for Southwest Virginia Domestic and Sexual Violence advocates to meet and share information and provide support while working towards a violence-free society.
  • To advocate for the equality of every programs' ability to participate in Alliance work and training events reducing the obstacles of prohibitive and excessive travel costs and staff time invested thereby eliminating the need for some programs to choose between participation in Alliance work and direct client services.  (A 2-hour Alliance meeting or training requires a staff time investment of 12+ hours, a 6-hour Alliance meeting or training requires a staff time investment of 16+ hours in addition to prohibitive mileage expenses and hotel costs.  Large amounts of staff time required to participate not only considerably reduces the amount of staff time that can be spent providing local services during the week, it creates an additional hardship since the revision of the Fair Labor Standards Act.) 
  • To address the challenges distinct to Domestic and Sexual Violence victims/survivors in Southwest Virginia.
  • To be a catalyst for challenging and changing the disempowering influences of dominant culture on citizens in Southwest Virginia.

Virginia Teen Dating Violence Prevention Task Force

As a taskforce of the Virginia Sexual & Domestic Violence Action Alliance, VTDVPT is committed to furthering the mission of all local agency staff doing teen dating violence prevention work across Virginia.

VTDVPT’s ongoing activities include:

  • Serving as a vehicle for networking and information sharing amongst these professionals
  • Organizing an annual statewide conference for teens interested in dating violence prevention
  • Finalizing a redraft of a facilitator’s guide for anyone doing dating violence prevention work with teens. (The guide is full of helpful suggestions and tested educational activities.)
  • Developing a new prevention initiative with the coaching and training help of the PREVENT Institute staff at UNC Chapel Hill.

Wild Women of Wisdom Task Force

The preliminary goals of the Wild Women of Wisdom Task Force are to celebrate aging in a positive way, support each other, share strategies about how we are able to do this work and thrive—mentor women in the movement, and advocate for older homeless, battered and sexual assault survivors, and practice laughter and support our senses of humor. The Task Force is in the process of creating a curriculum about how sexual and domestic violence agencies can more effectively work with older women.

Caucuses:

Women of Color Caucus

The purpose of the Women of Color Caucus is to create a source of peer/professional support and information, to develop Women of Color leadership within the coalition, and to provide a voice for Women of Color who might not otherwise be heard. History has shown that Women of Color must be responsible for doing our own work because no one else will do it for us. Meetings are open to all individuals who self-identify as Women of Color, particularly those who work in Virginia’s domestic violence programs and sexual assault crisis centers.

Why the term "Women of Color"?
The term Women of Color is a political statement because it represents women
as an oppressed class who have claimed the power to name and define themselves and their experiences.  Women of Color (WOC) include but are not limited to Native American, Africans, Hispanic, African-American, Chinese, Filipinos, Japanese, Koreans, Thai, Indo-Chinese, Vietnamese, and Pakistanis. WOC reflect a diverse group of women.

Survivor Caucus

The Survivor Caucus consists of survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and child abuse; the goal of this caucus is to provide a safe place for survivors to have their voices heard while working within the Action Alliance to help implement governing rules. The Caucus is currently working on developing Camp Mabon, a camping and growth experience for survivors.

For more information E-mail Directors@vsdvalliance.org. E-mail is not a secure form of communication. To ensure confidentiality please call the Family Violence & Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.838.8238 (V/TTY).