Montreal Gazette

Rape kits hard to get after assaults, advocates charge

- LAURA KANE

When Susan Chapelle awoke in a stranger’s home, her head pounding and her clothes on backwards, she didn’t even consider reporting her rape.

Chapelle was a young woman when she was drugged and assaulted after going to a man’s house to buy a pet. She felt an immediate rush of shame that stuck with her for two decades.

“I felt horribly guilty for going to his house in the first place, and I felt horribly guilty for drinking a glass of wine,” she recalled. “All I could think was: ‘It’s my fault.”’

Now, the Squamish, B.C., councillor is devoting herself to removing hurdles in the justice system for sexual assault victims. And one of her top priorities is to bring rape kits — forensic exams that collect evidence after an attack — to her small district north of Vancouver.

Many hospitals in Canada still lack trained forensic nurses to administer the kits, sometimes forcing traumatize­d women to travel long distances or wait for hours. It’s yet another roadblock in a system that already feels hostile to victims, advocates say.

In the Sea-to-Sky corridor that includes Squamish, patients who want a rape kit must travel an hour or more, sometimes in the back of a police car, to Vancouver General Hospital, said Chapelle.

“Somebody who’s been through trauma, the last thing they want is to feel like a criminal and be taken in the back of a police car and then wait to have a rape kit administer­ed in the city,” she said.

Chapelle said she and the Howe Sound Women’s Centre have asked Vancouver Coastal Health to fund a forensic nurse position in Squamish, but the health authority lacks the resources from the British Columbia government.

“Vancouver Coastal Health has been very open and receptive,” she said. “The Ministry of Health is not interested in resolving the problem.”

The ministry responded that the authority is “actively engaged” in finding a solution. There are 13 health centres in southern B.C. that can administer kits, while doctors in all 24 northern hospitals can provide the exams, it said in a statement.

Across Canada, rape kit access varies widely and informatio­n can be hard to find.

Quebec and Ontario run their own forensic exam system, rather than using RCMP kits and labs. Quebec said it has 77 centres that can administer the kits, making it a national leader, while Ontario has at least 35 locations.

In Saskatchew­an and Manitoba, only urban hospitals have kits — outside cities, health care staff must call Mounties to bring in the equipment. Alberta RCMP also transports kits to hospitals upon request.

Access varies, too, in the Atlantic Provinces, where Newfoundla­nd has 36 sites that can deliver kits and P.E.I. has one. Nova Scotia has been criticized for a lack of resources, but the province said it has three regional teams of speciallyt­rained nurses with plans for two more on the way.

Irene Tsnepnopou­los-Elhaimer of Women Against Violence Against Women said forensic evidence doesn’t guarantee a win in court. But rape kits must be available so women can decide for themselves how to move forward, she said.

“Women respond to sexual violence differentl­y, and have the right to choose their own path to healing and justice.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? B.C. politician Susan Chapelle was 19 when she was drugged and assaulted by a man who would turn out to be a serial rapist.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS B.C. politician Susan Chapelle was 19 when she was drugged and assaulted by a man who would turn out to be a serial rapist.

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