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ט   (u׈         נZ2Wj6 hy$9ׁHhttp://mecasa.orgׁׁЈ׈EZ2Wj׉E =ANNUAL REPORT—Fiscal Year 2017
mecasa.org • 207-626-0034
׉	 7cassandra://jZY_2xxVFJfp2edLQs9jhsbDb6MliaDFEQXjF_RGCHc'` Z2WjZ2Wj(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://IeGgk4hTYXxhBjxGz6esO5iKJPwjOdnMuKgkuz0ST1c QF`׉	 7cassandra://p0_d1Mv-T3WE0jR4rKeNQTsOX_FTdnZUhhrdTJ-hUpgz`s׉	 7cassandra://kfigo_BVmm12IBFmlKl1UinZHStYVELYUqnJwfTRcHs'` ׉	 7cassandra://2lTsjuZ8nfQxhUAQsj87C_5b-dwc_LAu7dqd0kItjvQ U0͠]Z2Wjט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1DES7wd5T09gxkKsiHFkphMU0b6e5TeC0Wes4UiZt5Q `׉	 7cassandra://ZAR8HbAU51ZJJ10k4ny4WaE-nwO-UyxHqVRaiAbT7iopY`s׉	 7cassandra://9jy_nE4OesWXpDoEbxNHNbrp10jaXEBeC_eA_Mi9qrc#` ׉	 7cassandra://lL79Lx4yk1xq5GuovW1q-Jq4wgimmBHfldBeNJb3bNQ y͠]Z2Wj׉EThe Maine Coalition Against Sexual Assault is organized to end sexual
violence and to support high quality sexual violence prevention and
response within Maine communities.
MECASA Board of Directors
October 1, 2016 - April 25, 2017
Tamar Mathieu, Chair
Rape Response Services
Donna Strickler, Treasurer
Sexual Assault Crisis & Support Center
Lydia Christie, Secretary
AMHC Sexual Assault Services
Arian Giantris Clements
Sexual Assault Support Services of
Midcoast Maine
Fatuma Hussein
Immigrant Resource Center of Maine
Marty McIntyre
Sexual Assault Prevention
& Response Services
Melanie Sachs
Sexual Assault Response Services of
Southern Maine
MECASA Board of Directors
April 25, 2017 - Present
Tamar Mathieu,
Chair
Bangor
Erica Quinn-Easter,
Vice Chair
Woolwich
James Pineau,
Treasurer
Bangor
Lydia Christie,
Secretary
Caribou
Representative
Erin Herbig
Belfast
Erika Lichter
Brunswick
John Pelletier
Readfield
Craig Poulin
Palermo
Senator Kim Rosen
Bucksport
Betsy Stivers
Freeport
A special note of thanks...
Our transition to a community-based board of directors was labor-intensive and, in order to do it right,
required a range of outside assistance. It could have gone very differently, without significant support
from the Maine Health Access Foundation, which stepped in at just the right time. We were one of five
advocacy organizations that received funding to support capacity building. They helped fund critical
elements of our efforts as well as consultants, including more than a year of support from a team at the
Non-Profit Finance Fund. The result was increased agency capacity and a smooth transition to the new
board of directors who are already informing our work for the better. Thank you MeHAF!
1
׉	 7cassandra://kfigo_BVmm12IBFmlKl1UinZHStYVELYUqnJwfTRcHs'` Z2Wj׉EMECASA staff bring the voices of Maine’s sexual assault support centers
and the victims/survivors they serve to statewide and national sexual
violence prevention and response efforts.
MECASA Staff
Elizabeth Ward Saxl
Executive Director
Destie Hohman Sprague
Associate Director
Cara Courchesne
Communications Director
Erika Allen
Program Coordinator
Lisa Bowen
Financial Coordinator
Sarah Firth
Quality & Compliance
Coordinator
Meg Hatch
CAC Network Coordinator
Katie Kondrat
Underserved Programs
Coordinator
Katie MacDonald
Prevention Coordinator
MECASA Mission & Efforts
The Maine Coalition Against Sexual Assault is organized to end sexual violence in Maine and to support
high quality sexual violence prevention and response within Maine communities.
For over 35 years, MECASA has represented and served Maine’s sexual assault service providers and
works to end sexual violence through the following efforts:
• Initiating and advocating for victim-centered public policy;
• Providing expert training, technical assistance, and resources for providers and partners;
• Funding sexual assault service providers; and
• Informing conversations about sexual violence.
MECASA’s work spans a range of programming and partnerships to bring the voices of Maine’s sexual
assault support centers and the victims/survivors they serve to statewide and national sexual violence
prevention and response efforts.
2
׉	 7cassandra://9jy_nE4OesWXpDoEbxNHNbrp10jaXEBeC_eA_Mi9qrc#` Z2WjZ2Wj(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://NbtYR9oi6Xc1L_40bkq3XEZXTihGM-V3APmWlHMWqM4 `׉	 7cassandra://YH9zHL6ySVNvbsWuHvkI9vFGmSbaxX93iMGpZ8-R1Pg͇`s׉	 7cassandra://clsCOJh1kCga3A-LgRQx8uaHBwHmTEb0rxrl9GfduXg$` ׉	 7cassandra://IpI-jJdVRrPqNpg0r7D2X7YozanHsV2G-9tVq62_CLQ͞8͠]Z2Wjט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://SHdzJunYNzCHiYfT6_ywLYiyGGrGMI5doy1_aSJNgfU G` ׉	 7cassandra://gmG6AxDxQ-xtcSME5nID9d47KTyjPqelcLhQ9CYUMm8͈`s׉	 7cassandra://SvTo6iK6rOe9B7N1yjm5VdOh1td8LLOJQiaM-oig_x8&N` ׉	 7cassandra://2yoXd69_yGHAY_WH9vri8bTdpxCzSdFluJq56QcQ9uc͔͠]Z2Wj׉E
JMeeting the MECASA mission.
At MECASA,
we value:
• Serving,
connecting, and
leading a broad
community of
providers, partners,
and stakeholders;
• Both prevention
and intervention as
central to our work;
• Priority setting
based on
community-led
assessments of
strengths and
needs;
• The expertise
provided by
national research
and leaders,
as well as local
wisdom gained
through experience
and application;
• Victim-centered,
evidence-informed,
and traumasensitive
solutions
to issues of sexual
violence and their
underlying causes;
and
• A guiding
framework of
social justice, antioppression,
and
intersectionality.
Friends:
Throughout the last year, the MECASA staff has been hard at work
supporting and improving Maine’s sexual violence prevention and
response efforts. As always, we are grateful to Maine’s sexual assault
service providers for their hard work, dedication to victims and survivors,
and perseverance in their efforts to end sexual violence. We are also
thankful for our many partnerships with our funders, donors, and
statewide and national partners who make our work not only possible, but
our best possible work.
Our accomplishments over fiscal year 2017 include:
• Significant organizational changes. MECASA’s board transitioned from
a provider-based board to a community-based board. We are thrilled
to work with members of the Maine community who care about
and are dedicated to our mission. Our former board, the executive
directors of Maine’s sexual assault support centers, serve as our
Member Advisory Council where they continue to inform our work and
help ensure our critical connection to providers.
• EqualityMaine’s Partner for Equality Award. In April, we were
honored to receive EqualityMaine’s Partner for Equality award for our
work creating accessible and appropriate services and supports for
LGBTQ+ survivors of sexual violence in Maine.
• Changes to provision of services. MECASA and Maine’s sexual assault
providers consolidated the crisis and support line into one service
for all calls across the state. Two daytime advocates began providing
live answer to support line callers during business hours instead of
relying on center staff who may be anywhere from in schools providing
prevention education or in court with a survivor. Plans are now
underway to add text and chat capabilities to the support daytime
advocates provide.
Thank you for your support of our mission and our work. It is our
privilege to do this work alongside you. Please let us know if you have any
questions or thoughts about our programming.
Elizabeth Ward Saxl
Executive Director
3
׉	 7cassandra://clsCOJh1kCga3A-LgRQx8uaHBwHmTEb0rxrl9GfduXg$` Z2Wj׉EbMaine Network of Children’s Advocacy Centers
“The Maine Network of Children’s
Advocacy Centers has been the
driving force of extraordinary growth
in the past few years. The result of this
strong, intentional leadership is that
all child victims in the state of Maine
will soon have access to the quality,
evidenced based care of a Children’s
Advocacy Center.”
— National Children’s Alliance
FY2017 was been a busy and exciting year
for the Network, a program of MECASA.
We supported the opening of two new
Children’s Advocacy Centers (CAC) programs
to serve three additional counties. These
efforts included traveling to all corners of
the state to meet with CAC staff and their
local multidisciplinary teams (MDTs); helping
facilitate community conversations about
the development of the CAC; providing
logo, brochure, and website development in
partnership with CAC staff; and working with
CAC staff and MDTs to develop local policies
and protocols. We are available to CAC staff
across the state to help provide immediate, targeted, and expert technical assistance in the full
range of efforts required to build sustainable, effective programs that meet the needs of sexually
abused children and their families.
CAC services are currently available to sexually
abused children and their families in nine
of Maine’s 16 counties. The Network also
supported three MDTs in the development of
their programs. We anticipate that by the end of
2018, CAC services will be available statewide.
Now that there are MDTs in all areas of the
state, we have been focusing on providing
training opportunities to CAC staff and MDT
members. Over the last year we collaborated
with the Northeast Regional Children’s
Advocacy Center to provide a training on
the national accreditation standards for CAC
management and staff; a full day training
for over 120 participants on strengthening
child sexual abuse investigations using the
MDT approach; and a two-day MDT Academy
where eight teams came together to learn
about MDT development, communication, and
sustainability.
1
2
Accredited
Operational & working
toward accreditation
Developing
4
׉	 7cassandra://SvTo6iK6rOe9B7N1yjm5VdOh1td8LLOJQiaM-oig_x8&N` Z2WjZ2Wj(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://D-SRts_9fxNpe8rBb71CsnzreylwOMh1Q6RJTb5VQwU `` ׉	 7cassandra://VtnYrZr1i9Zp-_-0lmgUVTafc1-z0xrWl3QmqlI9zjMz>`s׉	 7cassandra://n4L998YEGXdvvRGrtno8eIzXt83KLVLvpP0HCKKxCkY#` ׉	 7cassandra://tmRGFVhzZ02xmrjrG4k4RxxAujV7xZhT2ZqQsiUognoo1͠]Z2Wjט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1cf1PVF9qry__uJKRTvMi70oM-_cLhFNBXv5yjqqbOM i` ׉	 7cassandra://gedu-ze5jTEICoiVteAgkjbs2Q6kOExhWwJ5JYSU5VQ͙0`s׉	 7cassandra://mfs8oFBr6ZEsRFzVA-kjB7AroJ8w_0IPdgm8CgzD_m0(` ׉	 7cassandra://bnuCohJDna_BNoFXwXGtEbU0Lg9iNfZMFhwcl6QoYog L͠]Z2Wj׉EWe have also increased the number of professionals who conduct child-focused, legally sound,
evidence-based, trauma-informed forensic interviews. Maine currently has 18 CAC staff and
MDT members trained in the National Children’s Advocacy Center’s model.
The Network continues to convene quarterly Peer Review and training sessions for this
dedicated group to develop their skills, share strategies, and review relevant research. One
provider noted, “The Network has been essential to CACs, assisting with growth, training needs,
sustainability and opportunities to enhance and build upon existing strengths for CAC staff and
MDT partners, which helps to enhance our abilities and capacities to provide quality services to
children and families in the state of Maine.”
We also partnered with the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and the National
Children’s Alliance (NCA) to install state-of-the art recording equipment in CACs across the state.
This specialized equipment will ensure that forensic interviews are accurately and consistently
documented, which will aid in minimizing the number of times a child must be interviewed
during an investigation and support our efforts to increase effective prosecutions of child sexual
abuse. Thank you DHHS and NCA!
Maine’s Children’s Advocacy Centers by the Numbers - FY 17
Counties Covered
by Operating CACs
9
Interviews
826
Forensic
Family Advocacy
Sessions
2110
“After a career of over twenty years in law
enforcement, my work with the CAC is amongst
the endeavors of which I am most proud.”
— MDT Member
5
Counties Covered
by December 2018
16
Family Advocacy
Service Hours
1400+
׉	 7cassandra://n4L998YEGXdvvRGrtno8eIzXt83KLVLvpP0HCKKxCkY#` Z2Wj׉E	Prevention
MECASA’s FY 17 prevention efforts focused on two key initiatives:
expanding our ability to measure prevention outcomes in a
streamlined, statewide way; and expanding the statewide approach to
child sexual abuse prevention within the public school setting.
For many years, our statewide prevention efforts have aligned with
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s initiatives to engage
in sexual violence prevention using the public health model. We
have a longstanding commitment to supporting statewide outcome
evaluation and measuring the impact of our programming. This
fall, we updated the prevention evaluation system which has been in the field since 2015. This
program supports local prevention educators with measuring the impact of their key content –
such as consent, communication, media literacy, sexual harassment, and gender norms – and
includes feedback from teachers to report on changes they’ve observed in student language
and behaviors as a result of programming. The evaluations continue to connect with the Maine
Department of Education Maine Learning Results, which highlight age-appropriate healthy skills
and behaviors for all Maine students.
While Sexual Assault Awareness Month in April is always
a chance to highlight our important anti-sexual violence
efforts, in FY 17 we were thrilled to be able to focus the
spotlight on prevention. The theme of the month was “Say
Yes to Consent,” and we developed a fun campaign to bring
the message of consent to all ages. This included temporary
tattoos (see insets), stickers, and notebooks, as well as inperson
and online conversations about how to promote and
negotiate consent in our everyday lives.
Finally, this last year we worked with the Maine Dept. of
Education to complete a model policy for mandatory child
sexual abuse prevention in all Maine public elementary
schools. The new model policy will require schools from
kindergarten to grade 5 to: provide child sexual abuse
prevention education to all students; and provide training
on prevention, response, and reporting of sexual abuse within the school setting to all school
personnel interacting with these students. Schools will be required to fully implement the policy
by the end of the 2017-18 school year. MECASA is currently working to develop a statewide child
sexual abuse prevention and policy implementation guide, and will make it publicly available
(along with free training for Maine schools) in the winter.
6
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In FY 17, the Maine Sex Trafficking and
Exploitation Network (Maine STEN)
spent much of our time coordinating and
delivering training from York to Caribou.
MECASA staff, in collaboration with the
Office of the Attorney General and the
Maine Criminal Justice Academy, developed
and delivered mandatory human trafficking
training for all full-time law enforcement
officers. MECASA staff presented to 182 law
enforcement officers as a part of the Chief’s
Roadshow, and all other sworn officers will
complete the training online.
“I have been to other trainings
about human trafficking and sex
trafficking and all have been very
informative, but this was very
specific and focused on how to ask
questions to recognize trafficking
and how to help as an advocate.
This was the next piece we needed
as an organization.”
— Training
MECASA staff and local anti-trafficking
multidisciplinary (MDT) teams delivered the Human Trafficking in Maine: Identification and
Response training to over 350 service providers, law enforcement, and community members
throughout Maine. Approximately 97% of participants said the training increased their
understanding of dynamics and prevalence of human trafficking in Maine.
This last year we convened the first statewide training on
how to deliver services to survivors of human trafficking
in the advocacy framework. Over 60 sexual assault and
domestic violence service providers, including culturally
specific and tribal service providers, gathered for a day in
Bangor to hear from national speakers on how trafficking
intersects with advocacy work. Topics included how to
increase identification with trauma-informed practices,
working with survivors of exploitation, and the intersection
of labor trafficking and sexual violence.
With the support and expertise of the Maine STEN Provider
Council, we developed the first statewide outreach poster
(see inset), designed to connect survivors of labor and sex
trafficking and exploitation to support and services. Posters
have been distributed throughout Maine by local antitrafficking
MDTs and are available in English, Mandarin,
Spanish, French, and Arabic. We also collaborated with
Leighton Images to create a PSA, which has been broadcast
statewide with airtime supported by DHHS as well as
through airtime donated by Maine TV stations.
7
׉	 7cassandra://_UkeuUUiOsRc2RtRG6caQagIv2SqGiwR3zKUZA24g8o+'` Z2Wj׉EAlso in FY 17, in collaboration with local providers, we offered a survey to the five local anti-trafficking
teams (covering nine counties and representing over 20 disciplines) to measure the impact
of their local teams.
As a result of participating on their MDT, participants:
Increased their skills in
identifying &
serving victims
80%
92.3%
Increased their
knowledge of
trafficking
Feedback from participants included:
“MDTs bring the different pieces together because trafficking requires both law enforcement and
non-law enforcement entities to be involved from the start. Police need to know who to call, and
victims need someone they can trust with information that may involve illegal activity.”
“It has been wonderful to see the willingness of some agencies to participate as well as offer time
and resources.”
“This group is passionate and works very hard to educate themselves on this issue. I get so much
from this group.
“Our team is a collaboration of many great law enforcement and advocacy agencies.”
“I have taken a lot from the meetings and formed community relationships to benefit the youth
we serve.”
Believe the
MDT fosters
collaboration
91%
Know who to call & will
make the call if serving a
trafficking victim
86%
8
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Underserved Programs
MECASA was awarded the Partners for Equality Award
from EqualityMaine for our work creating accessible and
appropriate services and supports for LGBTQ+ survivors of
sexual violence in Maine. We couldn’t do this work without
our engaged LGBTQ+ Advisory Board with participants from
the Health Equity Alliance, EqualityMaine, Pine Tree Legal
Services, Maine TransNet, University of Southern Maine, SAGE
Maine, and sexual assault and domestic violence advocates.
We expanded the scope of the Advisory Board’s work to include domestic violence. It is now
co-chaired with the Maine Coalition to End Domestic Violence and includes domestic violence
advocates. This collaboration seeks to access the expertise of our partners efficiently, while
increasing collaboration between local services providers. MECASA and MCEDV will present a
workshop at the National Center on Victims of Crime Conference about the Advisory Board and how
this collaboration creates better support for LGBTQ+ survivors.
“We get to do this work, because MECASA’s board understands that
it’s necessary and right, and because funders believe it’s important. We
know that it takes more than just opening the door to make services
accessible to LGBTQ+ survivors of sexual violence.”
-MECASA Partners for Equality Award Acceptance Speech
Thanks to a grant from the Office on Violence Against Women, and additional support from DHHS,
FY 2017 saw the launch of Maine’s rural programming: specific support, training, and technical
assistance to new rural-focused advocates across the state. We created an online toolkit of ruralspecific
resources, including webinars, articles, and tip sheets. MECASA also offered support to
rural advocates with site visits, rural-specific tools, and newly developed peer support calls, which
offer rural advocates throughout the state the opportunity to connect with other advocates via
teleconference. Rural advocates talked about their successes and ways to address challenges. Peer
support and connection helped break the isolation that advocates sometimes feel when doing
sexual assault work in rural areas. There are currently eleven advocates who are part of the Rural
Advocate Cohort, and we are excited to work with them to further develop programs to support
survivors in rural areas.
MECASA staff also continue to work as part of the Maine Council for Elder Abuse Prevention. During
this last year, we specifically provided support around the 4th Annual Maine Elder Abuse Summit
and developed the Council’s statewide World Elder Abuse Awareness Day campaign. We also
supported efforts to expand tools and strategies to increase mandated reporting of elder abuse.
9
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MECASA staff, with the support of the Maine Department of Corrections, authored the
curriculum for the 2017 mandatory training for law enforcement on transgender survivors and
sexual violence. With support from our partners at EqualityMaine, we wrote a curriculum that
is both informative for those not familiar with people who are transgender and helpful for those
who may already have a base knowledge.
In addition to the significant technical assistance we provided to advocates serving survivors who
are incarcerated, we also developed a set of posters for state-run correctional facilities. These
posters provide information to people who are incarcerated on help and support advocates
can provide, how to contact an advocate, and how to report an assault to the Department of
Corrections. The posters are written at an appropriate literacy level to ensure the best reach
among incarcerated survivors, and are part of MECASA’s ongoing efforts to make all of our
outreach materials as accessible as possible.
Additional Provider Support
The core of our work is to support sexual assault service providers across the state to increase
their capacity to do the hard work they do in supporting survivors. Most of that work is part of
other MECASA programming, but two particular efforts are in their own category.
MECASA staff spent the year finalizing the centralized, live-answer, statewide crisis and support
line. In February 2017, providers consolidated the crisis and support line into one answering
service for all calls across the state. In August, two
daytime advocates began providing live-answer to
support line callers during business hours. While
local centers still have staff or volunteers ready
to handle accompaniments to hospitals or to law
enforcement, centralized coverage means that
local staff have more time to focus on other work
with survivors. As one Client Services Manager
said, “We so appreciate the extra layers of support
the daytime advocates provide to victims and
survivors. They give us time to attend to our work
beyond answering the hotline.”
Plans are now underway to add text and chat capabilities to the support daytime advocates
provide. These changes ensure that callers to the support line get services that are supportive,
speedy and appropriate—and still stay connected to local support if they need it.
“We so appreicate the extra
layers of support the daytime
advocates provide to victims
and survivors. They give us time
to attend to our work beyond
answering the hotline.”
-Client Services Manager
10
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second annual statewide sexual assault conference
with the theme Possibilities into Practice.
With over 100 providers, educators, and partners in
attendance, the conference was a remarkable success.
Attendees came together to share new and innovative
programming related to sexual violence, develop skills
and knowledge to enhance programming related to
their disciplines, and energize and inspire each other
to continue their amazing work.
Our guest speakers were Kamilah Willingham of The
Hunting Ground, and the National Sexual Violence
Resource Center’s Jennifer Grove. With an emphasis
on self-care, social justice, and opportunities for providers to demonstrate the great work they
are doing through Ignite Talks (five-minute presentations on innovative projects), attendees left
excited to advance their work across the state.
Communications
In addition to communications work noted in other program areas, MECASA staff continued to
change the public perception of sexual violence through many platforms and audiences, including
traditional media, social media, and supporting Maine’s sexual assault service providers in their
local public awareness efforts. One of our main efforts related to elevating member centers’ profiles
in their community by rebranding (and in some cases, branding for the first time) their agencies.
Through this work, we’ve supported centers in making their image and digital and printed materials
as part of their services.
This work included in varying degrees of support depending on the center’s needs: facilitating logo
development, writing content for and designing new brochures, creating displays for tabling, and
building and writing content for new websites. Each time we’ve built a new website, we trained
center staff on how to use the
website platform and provided
a customized guide to their site
help them with frequently asked
questions. Over the last two years,
we have supported over half of
sexual assault support centers and
Children’s Advocacy Centers in
further developing their presence in
their communities.
11
׉	 7cassandra://_gWFy1_a3fBEAQPTdSrYGfGGdycHyWorFSW7nkDYz50(` Z2Wj#׉EThanks to a Services, Training, Officers, Prosecution (STOP)
grant through Rape Response Services, we worked with
two literacy specialists and a group of center staff to make
statewide outreach materials more accessible to lowerliteracy
populations. As part of this work, we developed
new outreach tools (a poster and a palm card with crisis and
support line information on it), updated several sections of
our website, and provided the content to centers for use on
their sites. We printed the new posters and palm cards for
center staff to distribute throughout their communities.
The literacy specialists also developed a guide for our
work and centers’ work moving forward, which included
advice on the most readable fonts, how to use images to
best convey the point of the materials, and many other
considerations. This project resulted in us taking another
look at all our materials (outreach and otherwise), and we
are excited to move this work forward in all of our efforts.
Public Policy
We are passionate about our public policy work and proud to
advocate for the interests of victims/survivors, their families
and communities, as well as for Maine’s sexual assault service
providers both on the state and national level. Our positions
are informed by the experience and expertise of Maine’s sexual
assault service providers and the communities they serve, the
best available evidence, and our many trusted statewide partners.
Specifically, we seek to expand, improve, and protect public policy
which:
• Meaningfully contributes to the prevention of sexual
violence;
• Ensures high-quality response to victims across systems;
• Promotes victims’ rights, protections, and victims’ access to justice;
• Increases community safety; and,
• Is responsive to the needs of marginalized and vulnerable populations.
During the First Regular Session of the 128th Maine Legislature, we worked, as always, in close
partnership with a wide range of partners. It was a successful, but difficult legislative session as
a result of several controversial bills. We engaged in a meaningful way on twenty-two bills last
session, and 90 percent of those resulted in positive or acceptable outcomes.
12
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The highlight of the session was Senator Mike Carpenter’s bill, now Public Law 300, which created
a new category of gross sexual assault which requires that individuals consent to the sex act.
While previously threats of violence or force were required for gross sexual assault, the new crime
ensures that the perpetrator is guilty if the victim has not “expressly or impliedly consented to the
sexual act.” Additionally, the law no longer allows a defense when a victim voluntarily consumed
drugs or intoxicants provided by the perpetrator. These changes were long overdue and we are
hopeful that they are going to encourage prosecutors to take on a wider range of cases.
We are now focused on the session ahead which will convene in January of 2018. We are working
with legislative allies to introduce bills including a forced labor statute to support human trafficking
victims, and to address a loophole allowing adults to harass teens by sending sexually explicit
photos of themselves. We will also be working on several bills carried over from the first session
including two related to sex trafficking and Marsy’s Law, also known as the Victims’ Bill of Rights.
However, our policy work is not confined to the State House. As always, we engaged in public policy
advocacy through a variety of venues. We have worked for several years with the Department of
Education to implement a statewide policy requiring sexual abuse prevention education in public
kindergarten through grade five; the final model policy was launched this fall, and MECASA will
publish a guide for schools in the winter. And, thanks to the Chief Justice, we also served on the
Transparency and Privacy in Court Records Taskforce, where we worked to find a balance between
the public’s interest in transparency and the privacy rights of crime victims, as Maine’s Courts
expand the use of technology to do their work.
Bringing MECASA’s values to the table
There are many statewide public policy commissions, work groups, and councils where
we bring voices of survivors and sexual assault service providers to the table. Below
are some examples from the last year.
• Alliance for Maine Women
• Attorney General’s Trafficking Work Group
• Committee on Media & the Courts
• Dept. of Corrections Victim Advisory Group
• Justice Assistance Council
• Maine Child Welfare Advisory Panel
• Maine Commission on Domestic &
Sexual Abuse
• Maine Council for Elder Abuse Prevention
13
• Maine County & Municipal Detention
Advisory Committee
• Maine Criminal Justice Academy Board
of Trustees
• Maine Permanent Commission on
the Status of Women
• National Children’s Alliance Collaborative
Work Group on Public Policy
• SAFE Advisory Board
׉	 7cassandra://HD2Q6DEg9WSwb-I3JTi-1e-XhrPP8hdBGaL53a1EQC8*` Z2Wj'׉EHFY 2017 Financial Overview
REVENUES & OTHER SUPPORT
Dues/Donations
Foundations
State and Federal Grants
Sub-Contracts
Interest and Dividend
Unrealized Gain/Loss
Other Revenue
EXPENSES:
Prevention & Victims Services
Technical Assistance & Coalition Building
Pass-Through to Service Providers
Other Sub-Contracted Program
Management & General
Change in Net Assets
Net Assets at Beginning of Year
Net Assets at End of Year
9/30/2017 (Audit in progress) 9/30/2016 (Audited)
24,383
13,911
30,902
15,000
2,755,326
3,635
1,816
5,828
-
2,804,899
590,916
128,996
1,998,234
66,563
26,289
2,810,998
(6,099)
139,986
214,977
FY 2017 Expenses
Programming: 786,475
Pass-Through to Service Providers: 1,998,234
Management & General: 26,289
1,953,564
3,506
1,369
5,489
-
2,009,830
526,317
111,856
1,281,704
46,784
22,595
1,989,256
20,574
113,116
139,986
14
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