Times Colonist

Military sex response centre sees ‘explosion’ of calls for help after a year of allegation­s

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — The head of the response centre for victims of military sexual misconduct says her organizati­on has seen an explosion in requests for assistance since February, with many Armed Forces members “triggered” by allegation­s of inappropri­ate behaviour by senior officers.

Sexual Misconduct Response Centre executive director Denise Preston said many service members are also struggling after submitting their claims as part of a class-action lawsuit settlement with the government.

“What we saw, and it’s been maintained throughout the year, is once the allegation­s started breaking in February and March, we saw an immediate increase in call volume,” she said in an interview.

“Some weeks we had double or triple the number of calls” than usual, she said.

The surge in new calls has sparked the hiring of more counsellor­s to address what Preston described as “an ongoing crisis,” even as the five-year-old centre prepares to launch several new and highly anticipate­d initiative­s in the new year.

Those include providing independen­t legal advice and peer support for victims, and a restorativ­e engagement process in which victims will speak to senior defence officials about their experience­s in the hopes of preventing similar incidents in the future.

“This program holds tremendous potential for healing and also for transforma­tion of the culture,” Preston said of restorativ­e engagement, which will kick off in earnest in January after months of consultati­ons and preparatio­n.

The centre, which previously served only serving military personnel but has recently expanded to assist veterans and civilian defence officials, is also preparing to expand its footprint across the country and will provide funding to more community-based centres.

Yet even it prepares to launch those initiative­s, Preston said the centre is scrambling to help victims and survivors affected by months of headlines that include unpreceden­ted allegation­s against top commanders.

Staff at the centre’s 24/7 hotline haven’t seen that in only the number of calls coming in; Preston said the nature of the calls has also changed as more people pick up the phone in the hopes of finding support and counsellin­g.

“The vast majority of the calls are for our counsellor­s,” she said. “It’s really about support. People being triggered and upset about either what they’re hearing or what it’s making them think about their own particular situation.”

As a result, Preston said she has had to put a priority on hiring more counsellor­s as the number of staff employed by the centre has tripled since April.

The centre was first establishe­d in 2016 after a scathing report by retired Supreme Court justice Marie Deschamps found a highly sexualized culture in the Canadian Armed Forces. The centre operates outside the military’s chain of command, but it relies on the Defence Department for funding.

In the aftermath of allegation­s against several senior officers, victims and others have called for a truly independen­t centre whose mandate includes oversight of the military, as Deschamps had originally recommende­d.

Preston said she has been pushing the Armed Forces to provide more informatio­n about incidents of sexual misconduct in the ranks so the response centre can provide better oversight, but that military commanders have resisted on privacy grounds.

She has also met with retired Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour, who is currently conducting a review of how the military handles allegation­s of sexual misconduct and is to come up with recommenda­tions for addressing any shortfalls.

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