The Welland Tribune

Women are not safe in Ontario

Women will vote June 7. Which party will they support?

- PAMELA CROSS, LIERAN DOCHERTY, AMANDA DALE AND FARRAH KHAN Pamela Cross is the legal director of Luke’s Place Support and Resource Centre; Lieran Docherty is program manager at the Woman Abuse Council of Toronto; Amanda Dale is the executive director of

Violence against women services are waiting with bated breath to see who will win this election. Despite the pressing need for continued and expanded investment­s in sexual assault services, access to legal supports, shelters and access to reproducti­ve health, gender equity has not been centred in either of the first two debates.

May has been a sobering reminder that women are not safe in this province.

On May 24, Elisabeth Salm, a 59year-old librarian at the Christian Science Reading Room in Ottawa, was beaten and sexually assaulted in her workplace. She died a day later in the hospital.

Earlier, Timmins police released the identities of the four people killed in a car fire last month. They were Tammy Gagnon, 34, Cole Gagnon, 16 and Brandi Gagnon, 14. Found close by outside the car was Joey Gagnon, 37. Police said all along that this was a “tragic violent event,” that was “isolated” and that there was “no remaining threat to the public.” These words are code for domestic violence homicide.

Since January, approximat­ely 19 women and their families that we know of have been murdered, and men close to them have been charged.

It was not until the third debate this past Sunday that gender equity and sexual violence were raised. There was an opportunit­y for each leader to highlight their actions, but instead of answering the question, the man who would be premier focused on memes.

In addition, in all three debates he has made demeaning remarks, such as “I like to let them go at it” when referring to women leaders and he has commented on Wynne’s “nice smile.”

These dismissive comments and the inability to answer a direct question about how he will address sexual violence within his party, as well as gender equity in the province, are extremely worrisome. We need a premier who will point out what they will do to keep women safe and make our communitie­s better places for everyone to thrive.

Ontario Thrive sent a short survey to every candidate asking for their commitment to gender equity. Every major party but one — the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves — has answered the questionna­ire.

We know that with economic security, women are less likely to become trapped in abusive relationsh­ips. Economic safety is built on safe workplaces, affordable child care, safe transit and a livable minimum wage.

School curriculum that addresses body autonomy, self-esteem, genderbase­d violence and sexual and gender diversity will lead to Ontario’s young people understand­ing the meaning of consent and that violence — physical, sexual or emotional — is never OK.

Post-secondary education that is safe for students requires meaningful sexual assault policies and procedures supported by true transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

Adequate housing that is safe and affordable means women and their children have somewhere to go when they leave an abusive relationsh­ip.

Ongoing implementa­tion of Ontario’s Long Term Strategy to End Violence Against Indigenous Women will begin to address some of the

Women will vote on June 7. We

need everyone’s support to make the elected government accountabl­e to the lives of

women.

long-term impacts of colonizati­on, the residentia­l schools program, the ‘60s Scoop of Indigenous children by child protection authoritie­s and ongoing racism.

Long-term, sustained funding for community-based counsellin­g, legal and other services for survivors of male violence will support women in taking the next steps after being subjected to abuse.

Implementa­tion of an Access without Fear policy across the province will allow people with precarious immigratio­n status to reach out to police and other services for assistance without jeopardizi­ng their ability to remain in Canada.

Safety, community health, transit, child care, access to justice, #TimesUp and #MeToo: each of these issues is connected and needs attention in the Ontario provincial election.

These issues are not fringe; nor is 52 per cent of Ontario’s population. Women will vote on June 7. We need everyone’s support to make the elected government accountabl­e to the lives of women.

This is the only way that everyone in Ontario can thrive.

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