CABLE NETWORK PUSHES ANTI-RAPE
LEGISLATION
By Maya Dollarhide
- WEnews correspondent
NEW YORK (WOMENSENEWS)--When
U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell presented
a Senate bill to the House
of Representatives in March
that would make it mandatory
for health officials to test
DNA samples from rape victims
within 10 days of receiving
them, the Washington state
Democrat had an entire television
network behind her.
Using an online
petition, Lifetime Television
had collected thousands of
signatures in favor of pushing
the Debbie Smith Act through
Congress. Although the legislation
is stalled, the campaign is
an example of how cable television
networks are using their long
on-air and Internet reach
to gather supporters for advocacy
projects of special interest
to their audiences.
In the last
three years Lifetime has made
women's advocacy campaigns
a priority. Through its public
advocacy work, the network
has raised public and government
awareness for heart disease
among women and fought against
so-called "drive-through
mastectomies." They also
lobbied for stricter sentencing
for criminals who engage in
video voyeurism, in which
the perpetrator spies on another
person using a video camera
hidden in the victim's home.
Network officials say their
most recent campaign, "Our
Lifetime Commitment: Stop
Violence Against Women,"
reached more than 84 million
people through made-for-TV
movies, on-air public service
announcements and the Internet.
Law Would
Fund More Hospital Examiners,
Standardized Rape Kits
Lifetime became
the key media player in placing
the Debbie Smith Act on Congress'
agenda early last March, when
hundreds of advocates and
network executives descended
on Capitol Hill to demand
that laws protecting women
from violent crime become
a priority in Washington.
The bill is named for a Virginia
woman who was raped in the
woods outside her home in
1989. After doctors collected
DNA samples from her body,
the evidence sat on lab shelves
for six years before it was
analyzed, leaving Smith's
attacker a free man until
he was imprisoned in 1995.
Supporters of
the bill are asking also for
$250,000 million to fund comprehensive
training for hospital examiners
working with rape victims
and for the production of
standardized DNA evidence-collection
kits.
Mary Dixon,
vice president of public affairs
at Lifetime, said that she
was pleased to take part in
an initiative to end violence
against women.
"Lifetime
is in the trenches to get
this legislation passed,"
Dixon said. "We just
can't let 500,000 rape kits
sit on shelves while rapists
are roaming free. We're committed
to this cause."
Nearly 300,000
rapes are reported in the
United States each year, but
only one in four results in
conviction, according to the
nonprofit Stop Family Violence.
Another 600,000 rapes go unreported,
most commonly because the
victim doesn't believe the
attack will be prosecuted,
the group says. And as long
as evidence sits on the shelf,
proponents of the bill say,
these victims are mostly correct
in their beliefs.
"What it
could save us in terms of
expediting law enforcement
and giving rape survivors
a peace of mind is worth so
much more," said Rep.
Carolyn Maloney, a New York
Democrat who supports the
bill.
Lifetime is
not the only network in the
public awareness-raising arena.
Oxygen Media, a cable outlet
for women, has also run its
own online and on-air public
service campaigns, as has
the Public Broadcasting Service.
But the forerunner
for these campaigns was MTV,
which pioneered television
network advocacy with its
1990 "Rock the Vote"
campaign to get voters to
the polls. Since then the
network has run anti-drug
campaigns, fought against
racism and discrimination,
and most recently created
an on-air and online campaign
against hate crimes, urging
viewers to ask lawmakers to
address the issue with congressional
legislation.
Dixon cites
Lifetime's current chief executive
officer, Carole Black, for
the network's focused and
hands-on approach to defending
women's rights and causes.
"Three
years ago Black helped us
focus on Lifetime's mission:
to entertain, inform and support
important women's issues.
We take that responsibility
seriously," Dixon said.
Oxygen Encourages
Support for Women's Election
Campaigns
Dixon adds such
efforts distinguish Lifetime's
campaigns from those at other
cable networks. The latest
campaign at Oxygen, "Choose
to Lead," highlights
the contributions of women
leaders and encourages support
for women running for elected
office.
Oxygen officials
would agree; they do not characterize
Oxygen's effort as a public-policy
initiative.
"We're
trying to become a platform
for women to raise their own
issues and we want to try
to stay objective with our
causes," said Michael
Wade, executive director of
Oxygen's advocacy department.
Cable companies
appear to have more freedom
in running public policy campaigns
than networks. Rarely do television
networks endorse public causes,
said Sreenath Sreenivasan,
an associate professor of
professional practice and
director of Online Journalism
Awards at Columbia University's
Graduate School of Journalism.
When the major network news
anchors donned American flag
pins after the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, they were criticized
for alleged bias.
"Nobody
wants to do anything that
would offend advertisers,"
Sreenivasan said. "At
one time crusading journalists
and networks offering on-air
opinions were not unusual,
but not anymore."
Sreenivasan
also is skeptical of online
petitions that networks such
as Lifetime use to generate
support for specific public
policy proposals.
"Anyone
can build an online petition
. . . They have petitions
for everything these days,"
Sreenivasan said. "I
don't know if e-petitions
actually change anything or
have any influence in Washington."
Susan Howley,
public policy director for
the National Center for Victims
of Crime, says they do.
Online petitions
"are a great way for
the average citizen to take
an active part in public policy
issues," said Howley,
who hopes that Congress will
pass the Debbie Smith Act
sometime this year. "We
have participated in e-mail
lists to Congress and I think
if you cannot make a personal
phone call or write a letter,
which may be a stronger way
to follow up, signing an e-mail
petition is definitely worth
the effort," she said.
"We tell our advocates
that 'whatever you can do
helps.'"
Dixon maintains
that Lifetime's petitions
have done a lot to ensure
legislative protection for
women's health and safety.
"Since
our online petition for the
Debbie Smith Act began, we've
raised easily tens of thousands
of signatures," Dixon
said. "And our campaign
against drive-through mastectomies
received 5 million signatures.
It works."
Maya Dollarhide
is a freelance journalist
based in New York.
For more
information:
Lifetime Television
for Women: - http://www.lifetimetv.com
Petition at:
- http://www.lifetimetv.com/our_commitment/violence/index.html
Rape, Abuse
and Incest National Network:
- http://www.rainn.org