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Victims
and their families may suffer crushing financial losses in the aftermath
of violent crime. Huge hospital bills, substantial lost wages due to serious
injuries or death, and unanticipated funeral bills can be a terrible burden.
Some victims may need only small amounts - like a child who needs a few
months of trauma counseling - but these costs are just as important, and
must be paid quickly to speed a full and effective recovery.
Our goal should
be simple: to place more federal funds in the hands of victims who need
financial help in the recovery process. Augmenting grant funds
for compensating victims would provide important new resources to reimburse
victims for greater amounts of their losses, and ensure that this help
comes as quickly as possible. With an unprecedented amount of money flowing
into the Crime Victims Fund this year - close to $1 billion - the
time has come to set aside a small portion of this additional revenue
to help greater numbers of individual victims and their families recover
more fully from the costs of crime. And this can be accomplished
with an almost negligible effect on funding for other types of VOCA-funded
victim services.
Two modest changes
to the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) would go a long way toward accomplishing
the goal of getting more federal funds in the hands of victims who need
financial help. Redirecting as little as $35 million of this $1 billion
(less than 4%) could mean that victims in many states would see substantial
new benefits and a greater percentage of their losses being paid. If other
funds could be made available for administrative expenses, victims in
some states would no longer have to wait months, or even years, to be
paid - the delays they face in making themselves whole again could be
shortened substantially. Applications to pay for medical expenses, counseling,
and funerals, as well as to cover living costs for injured or murdered
victims and their families, could be processed more promptly. And more
victims that don't hear about compensation opportunities could learn how
they could access these important benefits.
Victim compensation
programs are expanding. Last year, compensation payments to crime
victims reached a record high of $265.3 million, up nearly 7%
from the previous year. (In fact, payments in all states except California
(the nation's largest program) were up 13%.) Claims received from
victims grew by 9%. Last year, 35 states increased the total amount each
state paid to victims from the year before.
These growing programs
need more federal resources if they are going to continue to help victims
recover fully and expeditiously. While some states have sufficient resources
of their own, many more states do not have funds to meet the growing demands
being placed upon them.
Maximums remain low
in many states. Twenty states have caps of $15,000 or less; 12 of those
pay only $10,000. Only 13 states can pay more than $25,000. For some victims,
these maximums are far too low to meet all their needs. And states are
reluctant to increase benefits and expand eligibility without assurances
that funds are sufficient to pay all eligible victims. It's high
time to make some small adjustments to VOCA to ensure that crime victims
and their families share fully in the revenues available. At a
time when an enormous amount of money is flowing into the Fund, there
is no excuse to ignore individual victims and their families' financial
needs. Two small suggestions to accomplish this goal follow.
1. Expand Benefits
for Victims and Their Families by Increasing Compensation Funds Victims
and their families in a number of states are not receiving the level or
type of benefits that they need. Some compensation programs are unable
to raise maximums and offer new types of benefits because of a lack of
funds. In some states, certain types of victims may not even qualify for
benefits because of restrictions limiting eligibility. Children witnessing
domestic violence for example, may not be able to get counseling costs
covered. Victims need higher maximums and new kinds of benefits from compensation
programs, and many programs could use more federal money to provide higher
levels of payment.
"New Directions
From The Field," published by OVC last year to reflect the
thinking of a broad spectrum of victims and advocates, makes a number
of specific recommendations for compensation programs to expand benefits
and increase the number of victims receiving help. All of these recommended
changes will cost significant amounts of money - money that many states
don't have now.
Specifically, New
Directions says states should do the following:
- Increase maximums
to cover the huge losses suffered in catastrophic-injury cases;
- Increase mental
health counseling benefits;
- Add benefits to
cover transportation for victims and family members to attend criminal
proceedings across state lines;
- Take action to
increase outreach and loosen eligibility requirements, both of which
would result in a substantial number of new applications from victims
and family members.
Many states could
use more federal funds to implement these recommendations - and many states
will fail to implement them without more federal money.
Increasing the percentage
upon which federal compensation grants to states are calculated, from
the current 40% to 50% or even 60% of a state's payout, would take only
a small portion of the VOCA Fund, and would enable many individual victims
and their families to pay for more of their losses. Increasing the percentage
to 50% will cost the VOCA Crime Victims Fund less than $18 million
total for all states. Increasing it to 60% will require only $35
million in new VOCA funds. Currently, all of the states' compensation
programs combined get less than $70 million in federal VOCA funds,
and this is less than 10% of the expected $900 million available in VOCA
assistance funding next year.
The federal government
under present law provides a relatively small share of the funding for
compensating victims and their families. VOCA grants for compensation
provide each state only about 27% of its budget for awards to victims.
And since states shoulder nearly all of their administrative burden, the
federal portion of a compensation program's overall budget is usually
closer to 20%.
(Currently, states
are given a federal grant each year equivalent to 40% of the state's payout
of its own dollars in awards to victims. In other words, if a state spends
$1 million of its own money, it will get $400,000 in federal funds to
spend additionally. So, of $1.4 million spent annually by a state, $1
million, or 73%, will be state money, and $400,000, or 27%, will be federal
money. In this example, raising the grant percentage to 60% will increase
the federal grant to the state to $600,000, meaning the state could spend
$1.6 million annually, of which the federal share would still be only
a third. The state would still be putting up two-thirds of the money for
payments, plus administrative expenses.)
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