Our
herstory
describes Auckland Sexual Abuse HELP from
its beginnings to the present day.
Herstory
of Auckland Sexual Abuse HELP
The Auckland Sexual
Abuse HELP Foundation Trust was set up in 1982 by a committee of local
professionals with the purpose of providing a crisis service to women
who had been raped, particularly to support them through the procedures
of police procedures and medical examinations. In order to provide the
service, a 24 hour roster needed to set up with a phone number. It was
therefore decided that a 24 hour phone counselling service could be
offered along with the crisis service.
Auckland Sexual
Abuse HELP foundation grew quickly as it became apparent that women
needed more than just support at the time, that they also needed follow-up
counselling. As the existence of the organization contributed to breaking
the silence around sexual abuse and assault, the need for counselling
for survivors of historical sexual abuse increased. Currently we have
a staff of 20 in roles of crisis workers, duty counsellors, psychotherapists
and counsellors, administration staff, a clinical manager, crisis-coordinator,
business manager, researchers and child abuse prevention.
Funding for services
such as those we provide is always a challenge while the issue lives
to some degree on the margins of society. However, this has changed
over the lifetime of the organization to the point that we have been
partially government funded for some years with and Health Funding Authority
and Child, Youth and Family Contract. We also work on a fee for service
base with ACC. However these contracts do not pay the full costs of
service provision so the organization also relies on donations from
survivors, grants from philanthropic trusts, and financial support from
a group of individual donors in the community.
The service that
the organization currently provides for survivors of sexual abuse and
assault are a 24 hour telephone crisis counselling service, a call-out
service providing early intervention where a police report is being
made, a weekly crisis clinic for emergency appointments, an on-going
face to face therapy service for women, children and their families
(aspects of this service are also offered on Waiheke Island and in several
Auckland high schools), a group for survivors with associated alcohol
and drug histories, a prevention programme offered in preschools and
training for community groups on request. Our less obvious contributions
to the field are training practitioners and engaging in political activity
with the goal of societal change. We have a commitment to spreading
knowledge about sexual abuse and its effects as far as possible through
the social services field. Therefore, we take on as many students as
possible and provide ongoing training to staff.
Our political commitments
are towards the eradication of sexual violence and getting a better
deal for survivors. Towards these ends we lobby government and liase
with police. Breaking the silence around sexual violence is also a key
part of what we do - we speak out in the media and at rallies and conferences.
In 1999 we changed our name from the Auckland HELP foundation to Auckland
Sexual Abuse HELP with the aim of becoming more explicit about what
we do and bringing attention to the fact that sexual abuse and assault
remain unsolved issues in our society. In speaking openly we also hope
to contribute to destigmatisation of the issue for the large group of
survivors which exists - a group of about three quarters of a million
New Zealanders.