Kentucky Secretary of State Michael Adams
Reach the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233 or text START to 88788.?
Kentucky domestic violence survivors just got a little extra help from the state in staying safe from abusers.?
Republican-sponsored Senate Bill 79 passed the General Assembly during the 2023 legislative session and Gov. Andy Beshear signed it into law. ?
Called the “Safe at Home Program,” the law went into effect Thursday.?
It lets victims of domestic violence hide their addresses when registering to vote without a protective order from a judge. It also allows the State Capitol to be the address on public records and lets those moving from out of state easily join the program.?
The Secretary of State’s office and county clerks will know the person’s real address and can send them absentee ballots.?
“Kentucky has one of the highest rates of domestic violence in the nation. Even worse, government facilitates this through unnecessary publication of individuals’ home addresses,” Secretary of State Michael Adams said. He appeared alongside Gov. Andy Beshear Thursday to speak about the law, wearing a purple tie. (Purple is widely worn to raise awareness about domestic violence).?
“When a victim of abuse decides to leave and find a safe place, often her abuser is able to find her sometimes by learning her new location through easily-accessible public records,” Adams said.??
But: This law will work to fix that, he said.?
In 2023 Kentucky had the second worst rate of domestic violence in the United States, according to World Population Review data. The commonwealth is also 11th in the country for femicides – killings of females because of their gender, WPR said.?
The National Coalition Against Domestic Violence reports that women are more likely to be victims of domestic violence, but that anyone can be harmed in a domestic setting. One in four women and one in nine men experience “severe intimate partner physical violence,” NCADV said.?
Beshear said the high rates of domestic violence in the state are “unacceptable.”?
“We all ought to be committed to taking action, to making change, to every single Kentuckians’ safety,” he said.?
A person is eligible for Safe at Home, according to Adams’ office, if they:
To enroll in the Safe at Home Program, visit the Secretary of State’s website here. Applications should be sent to [email protected] or by mail at: Safe at Home Program,? c/o Office of the Secretary of State,? 700 Capital Ave Suite 152, Frankfort, KY 40601.
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