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Safety Plan
(from Sarah's Inn)
You do not deserve to be abused. You
have every right to be safe and free from fear in your home and
your workplace. You cannot stop an abuser's behavior, only the abuser
can. However, you can help develop a safety plan that can help you
increase your safety when there is an abusive incident. It's a good
idea to develop a safety plan before the next abusive incident so
that you can be prepared. Keep a bag packed with important items
so that you can leave quickly if you need to.
Every situation is different and what
follows are guidelines. Even by following all of the guidelines,
safety cannot be guaranteed because abusers are extremely unpredictable.
Use your judgement and instincts when responding to potentially
violent situations or instances of abuse. Call the crisis line when
it is safe for additional information or form case-specific advice.
Things to Take With You If You Have
to Leave
- Money, checkbook, passbook
- Identification - driver's license, Social Security card, passport,
green card, public assistance ID, work permit, etc.
- Order of Protection
- Birth certificates - yours and your children's
- Clothing
- Lease, rental agreement or house deed
- Insurance papers
- House and car keys
- Medications
- Jewelry/saleable objects
- Address Book
- School Records
- Toys
- Numbers to local domestic violence programs
Safety at Home
- Develop a safety plan and discuss it with your children. Review
the plan as often as possible.
- Change the locks and install devices to secure your windows.
- Make sure your children's school, day-care center, or camp knows
who is authorized to pick up your children.
- Tell your neighbors and landlord that your abuser no longer
lives there and ask them to call the police if they see him or
her near your home.
- Before you resume a potentially abusive relationship, discuss
alternatives with someone you trust.
Safety in Public or at Work
- If you have an Order of Protection, keep it with you at all
times.
- Inform building security and coworkers you trust of your situation.
- If possible, provide a photograph of your abuser to building
security.
- Vary your routes to and from work and arrange for someone to
escort you to your car, bus or train.
- Plan what to do in various situations if the abuser confronts
you.
Safety During an Abusive Incident
- If an argument seems unavoidable, move to a room or area with
easy access to an exit - not a bathroom, kitchen, or anywhere
near weapons.
- Identify which door, window, stairwell or elevator offers the
quickest way out of the home - and practice your route.
- Have a bag packed and ready. Keep it in an undisclosed but
accessible place where you can retrieve it quickly.
- Find neighbors you can tell about the violence and ask that
they call the police if they hear a disturbance.
- Devise a code word to use with your children, family, friends,
and neighbors when you need the police.
- Decide where you will go if you have to leave, even if you do
not think it will come to that.
- Use your instincts and judgment. Consider giving the abuser
what he or she wants to defuse a dangerous situation.
St. Bernard Battered Women's Program, Inc., assumes no responsibility for any injuries or loss
which may occur as a result of reliance on such guidelines.
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