VIDEO | Safe Haven hosts 2022 Blueming for Prevention Awareness Event

Amanda Clements, KSBB speaks at event Credit: Grice Connect

Last week Safe Haven held their annual Blueming for Prevention awareness event to bring attention to child abuse in Bulloch County.

Safe Haven is a program of Citizens Against Violence, Inc., a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to ending the cycle of family violence through prevention and education programs.

Speakers at the event included:

  • Kim Billings, Safe Haven, Legal Services and Public Relations Director
  • Tami Davis, Safe Haven, Executive Director
  • Donald Chavers, Agape Worship Center
  • Sergeant Jennifer Strosnider, Statesboro Police Department and Safe Haven Board Member
  • Amanda Clemments, KSBB
  • Lora Cooper, Prevent Child Abuse
  • Chief Mike Broadhead, Statesboro Police Department
  • Catherine Findley, Bulloch County State Court
  • Judge Joseph Cushner, Bulloch County State Court
  • Investigator Pre Cone, Bulloch County Sheriff’s Office
  • Kristen Kramer, CASA
  • Lily Gray, Teal House
  • Shelley Stringer, Statesboro Exchange Club

Video of the entire event:

Domestic Violence and Children

  • There are more children, by far, in domestic violence shelters than adults/parents.
    • Experiencing childhood domestic violence can rewire a child’s brain, encoding negative beliefs that can last into adulthood if left unchallenged.
    • Witnessing domestic violence can cause a regression in developmental milestones, and often children feel responsible for the violence.
    • Children can also begin taking on the attitudes of the perpetrator due to the child wanting to model the behavior.
    • Nationally, 15.5 million children witness domestic violence at least once in that past year.
    •   In a recent US Department of Juvenile Justice and CDC study of 4,549 children, 27 %children aged 14 to 17 reported that they had been exposed to DV in their lifetimes.
    • Children in homes in which violence has occurred were 9X more likely to verbally or physically intervene in parental conflicts than comparison children from homes in no violence occurred.
    • More young children appear to be present during domestic violence incidents than older children (especially 0 to 5 years olds).
    • In Bulloch County (from 2013-2017, children were in involved in 18.8% of FV incidents and 34.4% of incidents there was a child present.  As someone that has worked with survivors of domestic violence for almost 20 years, I believe this number to be much higher)

Impact on Victims

  • Sleeplessness, Depression, Anxiety, Problems at work or school,
  • Forced to change jobs or school, Forced to move, Forced to rearranged or cancel activities & social events, truancy, new generations of family violence, teen pregnancy, substance abuse, addictions, etc.
Return to Grice Connect