Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. To Build Transition Housing Spaces For Women, Kids Escaping Violence

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Oct, 2018 07:59 PM
    VICTORIA — The majority of women and children fleeing violence across Canada are not getting the help they need because of a lack of safe housing, says a national group that advocates for an end to violence against women.
     
     
    Women's Shelters Canada executive director Lise Martin said Thursday surveys of a 24-hour period have been done every year since 2014, and the latest one found 404 requests for help, but only 100 women and children were taken into a shelter.
     
     
    She said the results for the past four years have suggested up to 75 per cent of those seeking housing aren't getting it.
     
     
    But British Columbia is starting to offer some relief for women and children with plans to build 280 new transition homes in 12 projects located across the province, Martin said.
     
     
    Housing Minister Selina Robinson announced the 12 projects Thursday as part of the government's investment of $734 million over the next decade to build 1,500 housing spaces.
     
     
    Martin said the availability of longer-term transition housing gives women and children more comfort and time to work at building new lives away from the threats of violence.
     
     
    "Some of our work is supporting women to go from defensive survival mode to being able to develop a perspective that sees exactly what has happened and to overcome the fear and guilt and believe in the possibility of a life in which they can feel safe and valued," she said.
     
     
    Makenna Rielly, of the Women's Transition House Society in Victoria, says construction of 20 second-stage housing units in the suburban community of Langford would allow women and children a safe home for up to 18 months so they can transition to a new life.
     
     
    She said many women return to violent homes because they cannot find suitable housing.
     
     
    "Second-stage housing addresses a critical gap in transitioning from emergency shelters and support services for survivors of domestic violence and abuse," said Rielly. "We know that many women require longer than the 30-day stay at our emergency shelters in order to build a new and safe environment for themselves and their children."
     
     
    Among the 12 government housing projects are 10 beds at Vancouver's Salvation Army for women who experienced human trafficking and exploitation, 40 units of second-stage housing in Kamloops run by the Elizabeth Fry Society and in Kitimat, 12 transition housing beds, 10 units of second-stage housing and 20 affordable rental homes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Cleared In Death Of Carjacking Suspect At Ferry Terminal In Nanaimo: Watchdog

    SURREY, B.C. — Police officers acted appropriately in dealing with a carjacking suspect as they attempted to arrest him at a ferry terminal in Nanaimo before he was fatally shot, British Columbia's police watchdog said in a report released Monday.

    Police Cleared In Death Of Carjacking Suspect At Ferry Terminal In Nanaimo: Watchdog

    Canada Deemed U.S. A Safe Country For Asylum Seekers After Internal Review

     Canadian immigration officials have determined that the United States remains a safe country for asylum seekers, despite the Trump administration's crackdown on what it terms illegal aliens.

    Canada Deemed U.S. A Safe Country For Asylum Seekers After Internal Review

    Montreal Waitress Who Refused Sexual Advances From Boss Awarded $52,000

    Montreal Waitress Who Refused Sexual Advances From Boss Awarded $52,000
    A waitress who was harassed after refusing sexual advances from the owner of a Montreal restaurant has been awarded $52,000 by a Quebec labour relations tribunal.

    Montreal Waitress Who Refused Sexual Advances From Boss Awarded $52,000

    Liberals Write Off $6.3 Billion In Loans, Including $2.6 Billion To Automaker

    Liberals Write Off $6.3 Billion In Loans, Including $2.6 Billion To Automaker
    OTTAWA — The federal government says it won't collect $6.3 billion in loans, a figure fuelled by the write off of a nearly decade-old automaker bailout that the Liberals say had no hopes of being recouped.

    Liberals Write Off $6.3 Billion In Loans, Including $2.6 Billion To Automaker

    Jail Recommended For Police Officer After High-Speed Crash Kills Boy

    Jail Recommended For Police Officer After High-Speed Crash Kills Boy
    A provincial police officer who crashed into a car at high speed and killed a 5-year-old boy during a surveillance operation will likely be sentenced to jail time.

    Jail Recommended For Police Officer After High-Speed Crash Kills Boy

    Ultra-Low-Cost Carrier Wow Air Rolls Out New Route Between Vancouver And Iceland

    Ultra-Low-Cost Carrier Wow Air Rolls Out New Route Between Vancouver And Iceland
    Vancouverites looking for low-cost flights to Iceland will soon have a new option when discount airline Wow Air adds a route out of the West Coast.

    Ultra-Low-Cost Carrier Wow Air Rolls Out New Route Between Vancouver And Iceland