KHDE awards funding to KU program for sexual assault prevention initiative 

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TOPEKA — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment awarded a grant to the Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program at the University of Kansas for a new prevention initiative. 

The Cultivating Protective Communities program will extend beyond just KU, reaching communities across Kansas to create more protective environments against sexual assault using environmental design and strategic prevention. 

“When we’re moving to environmental and situational prevention, we’re saying instead of putting the pressure on people needing to be aware of their surroundings, how can we make the surroundings aware of them,” said SAPEC prevention coordinator Taylor Jones. “That means looking at a space and being able to see what aspects of that environment provide more vulnerable areas.”

With the help from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Rape Prevention and Education grant administered by KDHE, SAPEC will launch the new initiative with funding lasting through 2029, according to a news release from KDHE.

Along with being a prevention coordinator, Jones will serve as the program facilitator for Cultivating Protective Communities. She will oversee communication and resources for the program’s implementation sites across the state.

“They’ll have access to the funds necessary to get education or training around violence prevention through environmental design,” Jones said. “Whether that is a bar in town, their local shelter or local mental health center, they get to choose that location and I get to support them as well as helping train that site so that the site feels good about what they’re doing.”

Each site’s implementation team will work with community members on “reducing opportunities to engage in harm-causing behavior and increasing the desirability of engaging in protective behaviors,” according to the news release.

One implementation site, Jana’s Campaign, a Hays-based nonprofit dedicated to educating and preventing gender and relationship violence. The collaboration will allow Jana’s Campaign to expand beyond education alone, as well as increase prevention measures.

“Through that funding we can have two sites for implementation,” said Kaiti Blackburn, executive director of Jana’s Campaign. “We’ve pulled a committee together and over the next couple years our goal is to have one site on the Fort Hays (State University) campus and then one site in the Ellis County community.”

Blackburn said the ultimate goal stays the same: focusing on education in order to prevent these situations from happening. 

“Through this project and through Jana’s Campaign in general, our ultimate goal is to stop violence before it starts,” Blackburn said. “So if we can reduce the instances of dating violence, domestic violence, sexual violence and/or stalking, that’s our goal so we can live in a community where healthy and safe relationships are more of the norm.”

Kansas Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kansas Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sherman Smith for questions: info@kansasreflector.com. Follow Kansas Reflector on Facebook and Twitter.

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Resources for survivors

If you have experienced sexual violence or trauma, please seek the help that’s right for you. There are many options available, and you don’t have to file a police report if you don’t want to.

Get 24/7 help in Lawrence: The Sexual Trauma & Abuse Care Center
  • Call 785-843-8985 to reach an advocate, 24/7. (Consider saving that number in your phone in case you or someone you know ever needs it.)
  • After an assault: What are my options? Check this page for detailed information about
    • talking to an advocate,
    • going to the hospital,
    • making a police report,
    • and/or talking to a counselor or therapist.
  • On campus? Check this page for specific resources for the University of Kansas, Haskell Indian Nations University, Baker University, Ottawa University and more.
Resources on KU’s campus:
  • Contact CARE (Campus Assistance, Resource, and Education) Services: KU students can make an appointment online at careservices.ku.edu, by email, care@ku.edu, or by calling 785-864-9255. It’s free, confidential and voluntary to talk with the CARE Coordinator. All genders welcome. Read more here.
  • Find more KU campus resources at this link. Specific information about sexual assault exams can be found under the “Medical Care” tab.
  • Connect with KU CARE Companions on Instagram. (Note: CARE Companions are KU students in the Panhellenic community that offer peer support and info about resources, but this is not an advocacy service like others listed here.)
Domestic violence situations: The Willow Domestic Violence Center
  • Reach the Willow for help 24/7 at 785-843-3333.
  • Find more resources on the Willow’s website at this link.
More resources
  • StrongHearts Native Helpline: Call 1-844-7NATIVE (762-8483) for 24/7 safe, confidential and anonymous domestic and sexual violence support for Native Americans and Alaska Natives that is culturally appropriate.
  • National hotline: Call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233), text “START” to 88788, and/or visit thehotline.org to chat and learn more, 24/7.

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