Community Organisations Call On Government To Properly Fund Sexual Violence Prevention – PSA

Community groups have signed an open letter calling on the Government to properly fund prevention to reduce New Zealand’s rate of sexual violence, which is one of the worst in the developed world.
A study published in the Lancet estimated that among people aged 12 to 18, almost 30 percent of New Zealand women and one in five men experience sexual violence.
The open letter specifically calls for the Government to fund RespectEd Aotearoa, which faces closure in August. RespectEd Aotearoa delivers specialist sexual violence prevention education to schools, workplaces, prisons, and communities – work that changes attitudes, builds skills, and stops harm before it happens.
The letter was launched following no new funding for sexual violence services being part of Budget 2026, and last week’s news, revealed by the PSA, that the Centre for Family Violence and Sexual Violence Prevention is proposing to cut a third of its workforce.
“It’s clear that preventing sexual violence is not a priority for this Government, said Fleur Fitzsimons, National Secretary of the PSA Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi.
“Reducing our appalling record on sexual violence requires sustained investment in prevention, yet the organisations doing that work are being forced to close,
“Organisations have signed the open letter because they know that failing to properly fund sexual violence prevention means more people will be harmed. That is what is at stake here.”
There is widespread concern about the loss of an organisation like RespectEd, and what it signals for the future of sexual violence prevention and community public services in New Zealand.
“PSA members at RespectEd have built deep community relationships and specialist expertise over many years, that cannot be easily replaced, said Fitzsimons.
“The breadth of support for the letter reflects deep concern across the sector about what comes next,
“The community public services sector is at breaking point. Funding opportunities are scarce. Longstanding, specialist organisations are being forced to close. The cumulative damage to communities will take years to undo.”
The letter calls on the Government to fund RespectEd Aotearoa, recognise sexual violence prevention as an essential service, halt cuts to the community sector, and honour its obligations under Te Aorerekura – New Zealand’s commitment to eliminate sexual violence.
The open letter has been sent to Minister Karen Chhour, the Minister for Children and for the Prevention of Family and Sexual Violence. It is now open for the public to sign at: Fund Sexual Violence Prevention – Together






