Volunteers 8 • Philantlm^yJournal of North Carolina Lending a hand Pet care helps battered women In an effort to end abuse of ani mals and women, an animal rights group is helping battered women by providing foster care for their pets. By Ealena Callender For Lisa Finlay, the woman’s story is a familiar one. The woman, who has suffered from abuse at the hands of her hus band has finally decided to leave. Although she had considered leaving before, she stayed because she was worried about what would happen to her four cats if she left them behind. “She hadn’t left because she was afraid he would do something to the cats,” says Finlay, director of Feminists for Animal Rights. In response to situations like this, the Triangle Chapter of Feminists for Animal Rights has started a program to provide care for pets belonging to battered women. Through CARE - the Companion Animal Rescue Effort - volunteers provide foster homes for the ani mals. Feminists for Animal Rights started CARE as part of its mission to end abuse of women and animals. The organiza- hey unfortunately think that we are focusing on the animals rather than the women, which is not at all the case. What we are trying to do is help the woman get through a really difficult situation. USA FINLAY director. Feminists for Animal Rights SOCIAL SERVICES tion conducts letter-writing cam paigns, holds demonstrations and conducts workshops to educate peo ple about issues concerning the rights of women and animals. “We’re trying to make people more aware of the connections between different kinds of violence,” says Finlay. Often, Finlay says, a relationship with a pet becomes significant to women who have been isolated from family and friends by an abusive partner. “Recognizing the importance of the relationship, the batterer will use that as a way to harm the woman, recognizing that if he hurts the animal, the woman is going to be hurt,” says Finlay. “It’s also a way of saying, ‘You’re next.’” When they decide to leave, women in this situ ation must consider what will happen to their pets. “'They know that if they leave, the animal will be severely abused or neglected,” says Elizabeth Randol, a CARE volunteer and graduate stu dent at N.C. State University studying the connections between different forms of oppres . i i 1 4 Helping hands Ei^ty-two percent of nonprofits responding to a survey by The Nonprofit Times reported using volunteers. July 1995 Lisa Finlay, seen here with her pets, Rosie (on right) and Time (on left) is the director of Feminists For Animal Rights, a volunteer organization that works to end the oppression of women and animals. Photo Courtesy of Lisa Finlay sion. ‘“They need to find a place that can take care of the companion ani mal.” Activists say that many battered women have little money and few choices when they leave, so finding a safe home for their pets can be diffi cult. CARE works to make it easier for women to take that step. Women are often referred to CARE throng organizations such as the Orange/Durham Coalition for Battered Women. CARE accepts any type of domestic animal, including dogs, cats and birds. Since last year when the program started, about 10 animals have been placed in foster care. About 20 volunteers have signed up to care for animals. Once an ani mal is placed, the foster care volun teer provides food and CARE pays for veterinary care. Program leaders say they have received a great deal of support from the community. But they say peopie often don’t understand the connec tion between the abuse of women and the abuse of animals. “They unfortunately think that we’re focusing on the animals rather than the women, which is not at all the case,” says Finlay. “What we’re trying to do is help the woman get through a really difficult situation. We’re trying to help animals but we’re trying to help women too.” By helping the animals, volun teers say, CARE helps battered women. “Ultimately, by giving an avenue to the animal, you’re giving an avenue to the woman,” says Leslie Mann, a CARE volunteer who helps place animals, in appropriate foster homes. Still a young program, one of the major challenges CARE faces is sim ply letting people know about its ser vices. “I’ve heard from women who say, ‘If I only knew you were there, I would have used you,”’ says Mann. “I think we’re moving in the ri^t direc tion but, like any new program, we need more volunteer support.” Volunteers say they need help from more veterinarians and bat tered women’s shelters to let women know that the foster care service is available. Veterinarians, for exam ple, can look for signs that animals are reacting to domestic violence and provide information about the pro gram to the owner. For information about Feminists for Animal Ri^ts or CARE, call Lisa Finlay at (919) 286-7333. Red Cross takes on mental health rehef For decades, Red Cross volun teers have sped to disaster scenes to tend to the physical needs of victims. Now, they’re also tending to emotional and psychologic^ needs. By Susan Gray Joyce LiBethe sounds ebullient. She has the excited-yet-exhausted tone in her voice of a person who has spent the day helping victims of a disaster. And she has. The American Red Cross volun teer is speaking from New Orleans, where thousands of people have been left homeless following torren tial downpours and flooding. But LiBethe, a Charlotte resident, is not a nurse or doctor. She doesn’t know how to suture a wound or per form CPR. She’s a psychologist. And she’s one of the American Red Cross’s new line of mental health volunteers - licensed mental health workers who trail medical workers to disaster scenes to relieve victims’ emotional and psychological suffering. “Finally, people are realizing that SOCIAL SERVICES [mental health relief] is important,” says LiBethe, who has stuped criti cal incident stress. “People in disas ters experience a great deal of stress.” Following the widespread destruction in 1989 by Hurricane Hugo, which hit populations from Puerto Rico to North Carolina, the American Red Cross agreed to cre ate a mental health volunteer arm for its services throughout the U.S. It established the Disaster Mental Health Services in 1990. “For a very long time, it appeared to those of us who were at disasters, there were needs that went beyond the basic physical needs - shelter, place to eat, place to sleep,” says Beverly Clayton, preparedness asso ciate for the national office of the American Red Cross in Washington, D.C. 'The mental health service func tions like that of the Red Cross med ical health service. Professional men tal health workers - licensed social workers, psychologists, psychiatrists and family counselors - sign up as volunteers. TTiey receive special dis aster relief training from the Red Cross. And then they go on-call for disasters. LiBethe, who has a private psy chology practice, began volunteering a year ago. Her first duty, was help ing out at the scene of last year’s USAir plane crash in Charlotte. She worked at the crash site while bodies were removed, then camped out at a hotel where USAir put up victims’ family members. “I did debriefings [therapeutic talk sessions] in the hotel,” LiBethe Look for HUGO, page 9 Volunteers to help the homeless To recognize Homeless Month in North Carolina, the Homestock Festival will be held in Raleigh July 8 and 9 at the parking lot across from the Legislative Office Building on North Salisbury Street. Volunteers are asked to bring blankets or card board and dinner or break fast. Call, (919) 552-2636. United Way boosts 1996 Olympics United Ways will help to plan celebrations and cere monies for the arrival of the Olympic Flame for the 1996 summer games. "The involvement of local United Way organizations through out America is a wonderful , opportunity to make this a true grassroots effort," says United Way of America President Elaine Chao. Change of address for volunteer lines Hopeline, a United Way agency in Wake County, has changed phone numbers. The new numbers for its vol unteer phone lines are as ' follows: HopeLine's Crisis Line, (919) 231-4525; Teen TalkLine (919) 231-3626; and PhoneFriend, (919) 231-3939. American Red Cross responds In response to last month's tropical storm Allison, the American Red Cross has opened 50 shelters across northern Florida and Alabama. To help victims of the storms or other disasters, call (800) HELP-NOW or (800) 257-7575 (Spanish language). Volunteer attorneys are nominees Durham attorney Judith Siegel has been nominated for the North Carolina Bar Association's 1995 Oustanding Legal Services Attorney Award for her work as a full-time volunteer lawyer with the North Central Legal Assistance Program. Raleigh attorney John "Jay" Butler and Durham attorney Craig B. Brown are nominees for the association's Pro Bono Service Award. The awards were scheduled to be pre sented at the association's annual meeting June 15.