Extra government funding for family violence services is timely given there will be an increase of demand for months, or possibly years to come, Women's Refuge says.
The government has announced that in this year's Budget an additional $202 million will go towards family and sexual violence services.
Woman's Refuge chief executive Ang Jury said demand during lockdown increased by some 35 percent compared to last year, but she believed the full impact was yet to emerge.
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"Increased unemployment, growing emotional and psychological distress along with potential increases in self-medication will provide fertile ground for family violence," Jury said.
"These conditions are going to be with us for some time and we have to be ready for what's to come."
Jury said the funding boost will allow their organisation to pay workers what they are worth, rather than "burning staff."
Justice under-secretary Jan Logie said additional support for domestic violence services responding to Covid-19 would not end with today's funding announcement.
She said today's announcement was separate to the additional $15.5 million given to the services in March by the Ministry of Social Development.
She noted the government had been continuing to monitor the situation alongside front-line services.
"If we are hearing that the frontline agencies are struggling to respond in the next steps as we move forward, then we're going to have to be listening to that and have those conversations," she said.
She said domestic violence could not end with one or even three budgets and there was a lot more work still to do.
More support called for
Sexual violence network Te Ohaakii a Hine also welcomed the government's $183 million dollar funding boost towards family violence services, but urged the government to support non-governmental organisations too.
Its tauiwi chair Maggy Tai Rakena said the NGO family violence sector had never been adequately funded, and it spent a significant amount of time fundraising instead of helping whānau in need.
Ngā Kaitiaki Mauri spokesperson Joy Te Wiata said Māori whānau often presented with a high level of complexity and required highly experienced and skilled kaimahi.
She said until pay equity was addressed, Kaupapa Māori services across family and sexual violence would continue to struggle to recruit and to meet the growing demand for their services.
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