Regina Leader-Post

ACTION ON DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

Province introduces ‘Clare’s Law’

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Police in Saskatchew­an could soon be allowed to release informatio­n about someone’s abusive past if they believe that person’s partner maybeatris­k.

Dubbed Clare’s Law, the proposed legislatio­n is said to be the first of its kind in Canada and is aimed at reducing the province’s high domestic violence rates.

The legislatio­n would allow a partner, friend or relative to request background informatio­n, but only the person potentiall­y at risk would be allowed to see it.

An umbrella group of women’s shelters and support services says it has questions about what kind of informatio­n a person would be given.

The Provincial Associatio­n of Transition Houses and Services of Saskatchew­an wonders, for instance, whether they would be told if an individual had charges dropped in the past.

“Not all the details have been worked out in terms of what sort of informatio­n will be accessed,” associatio­n executive director Joanne Dusel said Monday.

Dusel said a committee is being set up to decide which cases would warrant informatio­n be released. Domestic violence advocates along with representa­tives from Indigenous groups and police forces are to be on the committee.

She said she’s not sure how many cases the committee would hear. Dusel said her associatio­n is continuing to consult the government and doesn’t expect the legislatio­n to come into force until the spring.

Justice Minister Don Morgan said it would not be mandatory for police to give the informatio­n requested.

“What we’ve done is we’ve created a protocol which allows them to do it,” he said.

The idea behind the law started in Britain after Clare Wood was murdered by her former boyfriend in 2009. Wood was unaware of her partner’s violent past and, after her death, her father advocated for more disclosure from police.

Criminal records are currently confidenti­al and can’t be shared without consent.

Opposition NDP critic Nicole Sarauer said there’s still a lot to be defined in the legislatio­n and more to be done for survivors of domestic violence.

“Although the marker has been moved today, by far this is not the end or the solution to the problem.”

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