2011.11.02: November 2, 2011: Congress Passes "Kate Puzey Bill" providing whistleblower protections for volunteers who report threatening activities and requires the Peace Corps to develop sexual assault risk-reduction and response training

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Congress Passes "Kate Puzey Bill" providing whistleblower protections for volunteers who report threatening activities and requires the Peace Corps to develop sexual assault risk-reduction and response training

Congress Passes Kate Puzey Bill providing whistleblower protections for volunteers who report threatening activities and requires the Peace Corps to develop sexual assault risk-reduction and response training

The House voted 406-0 Tuesday to pass the bill and send it to President Barack Obama for his signature. The Senate passed it by voice vote in September. The measure provides whistleblower protections for volunteers who report threatening activities and requires the Peace Corps to develop sexual assault risk-reduction and response training. The agency must also establish a victim's support office. "The Peace Corps has fallen disturbingly short in providing adequate protection for its volunteers and lacks a proper system for responding to crimes, including murder and sexual assault," said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. She said the bill she co-sponsored would make volunteer safety "the Peace Corps' overarching priority."

Congress Passes "Kate Puzey Bill" providing whistleblower protections for volunteers who report threatening activities and requires the Peace Corps to develop sexual assault risk-reduction and response training

Ted Poe says measure passed by House will make Peace Corps volunteers safer from sexual assaults

Caption: Texas Rep. Ted Poe announces the Peace Corps volunteer protection legislation this summer. Poe joined Sen. Johnny Isakson, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Rep. Howard Berman. (Congressional photo)

Congress has responded to complaints that the Peace Corps hasn't done enough to protect its volunteers from sexual assaults with approved legislation authored by Texas Rep. Ted Poe requiring the agency to better train participants in how to avoid such attacks.

The House voted 406-0 Tuesday to pass the bill and send it to President Barack Obama for his signature. The Senate passed it by voice vote in September.

The measure provides whistleblower protections for volunteers who report threatening activities and requires the Peace Corps to develop sexual assault risk-reduction and response training. The agency must also establish a victim's support office.

"The Peace Corps has fallen disturbingly short in providing adequate protection for its volunteers and lacks a proper system for responding to crimes, including murder and sexual assault," said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. She said the bill she co-sponsored would make volunteer safety "the Peace Corps' overarching priority."

ABC News broke the story and won kudos from Poe, R-Humble, in a House floor speech last night. The Texas Republican, a leader in efforts to combat violence against women, said he hoped the bill would make volunteers feel safe "so that more and more go join the Peace Corps."

Poe, R-Humble, and Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., unveiled the bill this summer at a Capitol Hill press conference

"The time has come to stand up and protect America's angels abroad," Poe said at the time.

The Peace Corps, celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, has been hit by criticisms that it isn't doing enough to protect the security of volunteers it sends abroad.

In May Peace Corps Director Aaron S. Williams appeared before a Foreign Affairs Committee hearing to apologize for the agency's shortcomings on volunteer safety issues.

"The Peace Corps has not always been sufficiently responsive, compassionate or sensitive to victims of crime and their families," he said at the time. "It is heartbreaking to learn, and I apologize for any additional pain the agency has inflicted on our volunteers."

Williams spoke after the testimony of three volunteers who had been raped while serving overseas and the mother of a fourth volunteer who was murdered in Benin. They charged that the agency did little to train volunteers in avoiding sexual attacks and was unhelpful in the aftermath of the crimes.

The bill was named after the murdered volunteer, Kate Puzey, 24, of Cumming, Ga. She was killed in 2009 after reporting a local colleague for allegedly molesting some of the young girls they taught. Isakson, Puzey's home-state senator, introduced the Senate bill along with Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif. Poe took the lead in the House.

Williams said after the vote that it was a fitting tribute to Puzey, and the bill "codifies many of the reforms that the agency has put in place over the past two years to ensure that Peace Corps volunteers serving worldwide receive the support and protection they deserve."

The Peace Corps has sent more than 200,000 Americans to serve in 139 countries since its founding in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy. Currently, more than 9,000 volunteers are serving in 76 nations.




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Headlines: November, 2011; Congress; Legislation; Sexual Assault and Harassment; Safety and Security of Volunteers





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Story Source: Houston Chronicle

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Congress; Legislation; SA; Safety

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