Federal Funding Cuts Threaten to Leave 680,000 Women and Children Without Critical Support Services
- The Women's Advocacy Group
- Jun 17
- 3 min read

The Women's Advocacy Center has released a comprehensive white paper revealing the devastating impact of federal funding cuts on women's support services across America. "The Critical Gap: Impact of Federal Funding Cuts on Women's Support Services Across America" documents how recent reductions in federal funding threaten to dismantle the essential safety net that over 1.2 million women and children depend on annually.
"We're witnessing an unprecedented crisis that will literally cost lives," said Romona Jackson, founding president & CEO of The Women's Advocacy Center. "When federal funding is cut, women are forced back into dangerous situations, children lose stability, and entire communities pay the price.”
The white paper reveals alarming statistics: federal funding for women's services decreased by 28% in 2023 alone, while demand for services has increased by 34% since 2020. Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) grants have been reduced by 38%, affecting 1,872 programs nationwide. Most critically, Family Violence Prevention and Services Act (FVPSA) grant processing has been suspended indefinitely, impacting 1,600 domestic violence shelters across the country.
The human costs are staggering. Research shows that domestic violence homicides increase by 26% in regions where support services are significantly reduced. Without immediate intervention, an estimated 680,000 women and children will lose access to life-changing and potentially life-saving services within the next fiscal year.
"At our center alone, we've seen a 50% increase in requests for housing assistance and a 15% increase in calls to our crisis hotline," Jackson explained. "Yet we're being asked to do more with dramatically less funding. The math simply doesn't work, and it's vulnerable women and children who suffer the consequences."
The economic impact extends far beyond immediate budget savings. The white paper demonstrates that for every dollar cut from women's advocacy programs, communities incur $7.25 in additional costs through increased emergency services, healthcare utilization, lost productivity, and greater reliance on public assistance.
However, the report also highlights hope through innovative solutions. Successful public-private partnerships in Charlotte, North Carolina, Colorado, and Atlanta, Georgia, demonstrate that communities can preserve and even enhance services through coordinated efforts between private donors, corporations, foundations, and local governments.
The white paper calls for immediate action from multiple stakeholders:
Individual donors are urged to establish monthly giving commitments to provide sustainable support during this transition period. Even $50 per month can provide critical services that break cycles of violence and create pathways to independence.
Corporate leaders can implement employee giving programs with matching components, which studies show increase employee satisfaction by 33% while generating substantial community impact.
Foundations are encouraged to create rapid response funds specifically for organizations affected by federal cuts. Community foundations that have established such funds report successfully preserving critical services during transition periods.
Policymakers at all levels must prioritize the restoration of funding streams and develop transitional mechanisms to prevent service disruptions.
"Private funding can be a bridge, but we need policy change for sustainable solutions," Jackson emphasized. "States with dedicated funding mechanisms have maintained 84% of critical services despite federal reductions. While we wait for the next budget cycle, women's lives are at stake right now."
The Women's Advocacy Center exemplifies the impact these services can have: 41% of participants successfully reenter the job market or increase their income, and 90% of women who left abusive relationships report feeling empowered to permanently end the cycle of abuse.
The complete white paper is available for download, providing detailed analysis, case studies, and actionable recommendations for preserving these essential services.
"The question isn't whether we can afford to maintain these services," Jackson concluded. "It's whether we can afford not to. The future safety and economic stability of hundreds of thousands of women and children depend on our response to this crisis."
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