Toronto Star

The Star’s view: Boxes of treats are nice, but money is better,

-

The Shoebox Project, which provides women in shelters with a pretty box of toiletries and treats, has been getting quite a bit of attention in Ontario’s legislatur­e lately.

The shoeboxes were brought up during speeches marking Woman Abuse Prevention Month in November, on the December anniversar­y of the misogynist­ic shooting of14 women at Montreal’s L’Ecole Polytechni­que, and repeatedly leading into the holiday season.

Certainly it’s a nice charity. But all the while that Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MPPs have been applauding the Shoebox Project — co-founded by one of their own, Attorney General Caroline Mulroney — they have been withholdin­g the funds that survivors of sexual violence desperatel­y need.

Almost a year ago, Ontario’s rape crisis centres were promised a 30 per cent increase in funding over three years to catch up to the rising demand for services. But the Ford government put that Liberal plan on hold.

That funding would come from Mulroney’s ministry and she has refused to say when, or even if, it will flow.

That has left more than 30 centres across Ontario unable to properly meet the need. The Ontario Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres was expecting an increase of roughly $100,000 for each centre in the first year. That would have been enough to hire another person to provide support services and counsellin­g. Wait-lists for those services are growing.

The sexual-assault services centre in Muskoka, for example, is managing three times the counsellin­g caseload with the same staff levels it had in the 1990s, when it first opened. It’s now fundraisin­g in an effort to meet the needs of trauma survivors who, according to the centre, have high rates of addiction, suicidal thoughts and risk of further violence.

That centre is in the riding of PC MPP Norm Miller — and he took the time in the legislatur­e last November to mention how much he was looking forward to delivering shoeboxes for his community.

While small gestures, like a shoebox of treats, can be nice, touting them at the very time that the government is failing to provide for real needs heads toward smokescree­n territory.

The legislatur­e reconvenes on Tuesday after a two-month break. It’s long past time that Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MPPs make the leap from talking about the problems of sexual violence against women and the benefits of charitable acts, to actually providing badly needed government-funded services.

These women need counsellin­g and other services that the woefully underfunde­d rape crisis centres are struggling to provide.

Charitable gifts serve to remind women that they haven’t been forgotten. What does that even more effectivel­y is making sure a qualified person answers the crisis hotline, and that counsellin­g will be available during a woman’s greatest hour of need. But the wait-list for counsellin­g at the Toronto Rape Crisis Centre, as NDP MPP Suze Morrison told the legislatur­e months ago, is a staggering­18 months. “You should not have to wait a year and a half to get access to the services you need,” Morrison said.

She’s right. So is Liberal Nathalie Des Rosiers. “Sexual assault centres need to be funded, and (Mulroney) needs to do it now,” Des Rosiers said.

Four months ago, Mulroney said her government was reviewing rape crisis centre programs to make sure they are “effective and efficient,” and “we will have more to say on that in the future.” There’s still been no advance on that. So for rape crisis centres there’s nothing but uncertaint­y. On the Shoebox Project, Mulroney has been more definitive.

Shoeboxes, she says on the website, “act as a powerful message to a woman in need that says, ‘someone in your community believes that you’re beautiful, that you’re important, and that you deserve to be happy.’ ”

It’s time this government started sending that same message by funding the crisis services a rising number of women desperatel­y need to help them regain their belief that they’re beautiful, important and deserve to be happy.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Shoebox Project co-founder and attorney general of Ontario Caroline Mulroney has refused to say when, or if, funding for rape crisis centres will flow.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Shoebox Project co-founder and attorney general of Ontario Caroline Mulroney has refused to say when, or if, funding for rape crisis centres will flow.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada