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ATTACHMENT G <br /> 2. compromise the confidentiality of information and privacy of persons receiving Office on Violence <br /> Against Women-funded services; <br /> 3. impose requirements on victims in order to receive services (e.g. seek an order of protection, <br /> receive counseling, participate in couples counseling or mediation, report to law enforcement, seek <br /> civil or criminal remedies, etc.); <br /> 4. fail to include conducting safety planning with victims and fail to account for the physical safety of <br /> victims; <br /> 5. deny victims and non-abusing parents or caretakers and their children access to services based <br /> on their involvement with the perpetrator; <br /> 6. require testing of sexual assault forensic evidence in cases where the victim obtained a medical <br /> forensic exam but has not chosen to participate in the criminal justice system; <br /> B. Requiring survivors to meet restrictive conditions in order to receive services (e.g. background checks <br /> of victims, clinical evaluations to determine eligibility for services.) or other screening processes that <br /> elicit information that is not necessary for services, such as questions about immigration status, gender <br /> identity, sexual orientation, disability, physical or mental health, and work or criminal history that the <br /> service provider does not need to know about to provide services safely; <br /> C. Project design and budget that fail to account for the access needs of participants with disabilities and <br /> participants who have limited English proficiency or who are Deaf or hard of hearing; <br /> D. Pre-trial diversion programs not approved by the Office on Violence Against Women or the automatic <br /> placement of offenders in such programs; <br /> E. Couples counseling, family counseling or any other manner of joint victim-offender counseling as a <br /> routine or required response to sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, or stalking, or in <br /> situations in which child sexual abuse is alleged; <br /> F. Mediation, couples counseling, family counseling or any other manner of joint victim-offender <br /> counseling; mandatory counseling for victims, penalizing victims who refuse to testify, or promoting <br /> procedures that would require victims to seek legal sanctions against their abusers (e.g., seek a <br /> protection order, file formal complaint); the placement of perpetrators in anger management programs; <br /> or any other activities outlined in the solicitation under which the approved application was submitted; <br /> G. Offering or ordering anger management programs for offenders as a substitute for batterer's <br /> intervention programs; <br /> H. Relying on batterer intervention programs that do not use court monitoring to hold batterers accountable <br /> for their behavior; and <br /> I. Enforcing or promoting nuisance abatement ordinances, crime-free housing ordinances, or crime-free <br /> lease addenda (often associated with crime-free housing programs) that require or encourage the <br /> eviction of tenants or residents who may be victims of domestic violence,sexual assault,dating violence <br /> or stalking. See also the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for guidance on how <br /> such ordinances and addenda may violate the Fair Housing Act. <br />