The Niagara Falls Review

Senator forging ahead with support for Senate staffers harassed on the job

- JOANNA SMITH

OTTAWA — A Manitoba senator is forging ahead with a plan to offer support to anyone who has experience­d sexual misconduct while working in the upper chamber, even if she is not allowed to use her office budget to pay the lawyer she hired to help shoulder the burden.

“We’re not stopping,” Independen­t Sen. Marilou McPhedran said Tuesday.

Last month, the senator set up a confidenti­al email address (confidenti­al@mariloumcp­hedran.com) and invited anyone who has been an employee, intern or volunteer at the Senate since 2006 to speak directly to her, or be referred to a lawyer.

The idea is to give them a safe and confidenti­al way to figure out their next steps, if any, and decide whether they want to pass along informatio­n that could help others avoid similar misconduct — in some cases without even having to name the perpetrato­r.

McPhedran said she has already heard from four people who want to share their stories, including a long-distance telephone conversati­on late at night.

“I won’t play a numbers game on this,” McPhedran said. “If one person had contacted me, that’s significan­t.”

The clerk of the Senate standing committee on internal economy, budgets and administra­tion has asked McPhedran for clarificat­ion on the proposed $7,000 contract for the lawyer, because its policies do not cover expenses for the type of work she has described to the media.

The original contract, according to a letter from the clerk that McPhedran provided to The Canadian Press, described the activities as providing procedural advice and drafting a memo regarding harassment of Senate employees, students and volunteers.

“Senate policies provide that senators may retain the services of contractor­s to support them in their parliament­ary functions,” Alison Korn, a spokeswoma­n for the committee, wrote in an email Tuesday. “This would not include paying legal fees for third parties.”

After the Senate shared that detail with the media — a move McPhedran is challengin­g on a question of privilege — the senator said she reached out to survivors of sexual assault and harassment to reassure them the offer still stands.

McPhedran said the Ottawabase­d lawyer, Anne Levesque, has agreed to provide the services pro bono.

And if necessary, McPhedran said she will find a way to cover the services herself.

“The safe and confidenti­al space I promised you ... is guaranteed,” she posted on Facebook. “My promises will be kept.”

McPhedran, a human rights lawyer who has chaired inquiries into sexual abuse patients, said survivors of sexual assault or harassment typically want to get a sense of closure, but they also want to stop the person who harmed them from doing it to anyone else.

“They want the institutio­n to stop the ways the institutio­n has been enabling the abuse of power,” she said in an interview last month.

I won’t play a numbers game on this. If one person had contacted me, that’s significan­t.” Sen. Marilou McPhedran

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