Times Colonist

Lack of funding hampering aid to domestic-violence survivors, report says

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OTTAWA — A study on shelters helping survivors of domestic violence become independen­t says a lack of funding is getting in the way of providing programs and retaining quality staff. The study’s authors say many organizati­ons, known as second-stage shelters, often have to fundraise to cover the cost of their operations and pay employee salaries.

Wages in the sector are low, leading to high turnover rates, with staff often leaving for government jobs.

The report from Women’s Shelters Canada calls for more funding to help increase the number of second-stage shelters, particular­ly in rural, remote, northern and Indigenous communitie­s.

It also says the federal government’s national housing strategy needs to remove barriers that prevent service providers from accessing money expand existing shelters or build new ones.

Gaelle Fedida, co-chair of the board for Women’s Shelters Canada, says government funding programs are key to maintainin­g the critical services, but they don’t always respond to the shelters’ unique needs.

“Definitely the national housing strategy has programs targeting this sector, but the programs themselves and the format are not at all adapted to our reality,” said Fedida, who is also the coordinato­r of an alliance of second-stage shelters in Quebec.

“This needs definitely to be adjusted if we want to develop new units and this is especially pertinent in the context of the global pandemic because shelters have to reorganize their space to accommodat­e health regulation­s.”

The shelters can go by different names, but are a transition­al support for women who have left emergency shelters and need a medium-term housing option as they heal from trauma and rebuild their lives.

Previous research by Women’s Shelters Canada has found that women on average spend about 10 months in these secondstag­e shelters during a period when they’re often at risk of lethal violence from leaving an abusive partner.

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