Making home a better place to be

Home should be a place that is welcoming and offers some comfort, a place that one looks forward to after a long hard day of work, school or play. However, for some — too many — home is a place of fear and violence.

When families are trapped in destructive patterns of violent behavior, the patterns can be not only difficult but next to impossible to change without outside help. This is where organizations such as Women’s Support Services in Sharon and the Susan B. Anthony Project in Torrington come in. In last week’s Lakeville Journal, Jennifer Kronholm wrote about changes in Connecticut state law affecting citizens dealing with domestic violence, interviewing the director at Women’s Support Services, Lori Rivenburgh.

Rivenburgh explained the ways in which the new laws will help those struggling to escape violence, including electronic monitoring (in several areas of Connecticut, but not all) and expanded notification of law enforcement of protective orders.  There is also now greater leniency for renters who need to leave their residences abruptly because of documented violence in their homes.

October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month, so a good time to become better educated about options if one is living in an abusive environment, or knows someone who is dealing with abuse.  Call Women’s Support Services at 860-364-1080 or the Susan B. Anthony Project at 860-489-3798.

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