Survivors of Gender-Based Violence
Supporting survivors with community-based services in regions throughout B.C.
Supporting survivors with community-based services in regions throughout B.C.
Here are some examples of service providers in B.C. and the work they are doing to support survivors.
Alberni Community & Women’s Services Society, Port Alberni
The Alberni Community & Women’s Services Society (ACAWS) in Port Alberni offers a variety of services, supporting women, children and men facing abuse and violence.
Recently, the Alberni Community & Women’s Society received $90,912 in provincial government funding, administered through the Ending Violence Association of B.C., to create a Sexual Assault Response Program (SARP), which has received overwhelming community support.
Although this is a new program for Port Alberni, the concept of SARP or SART (sexual assault response team) has been around since the 1970s.
Celine, who works as the Society’s Sexual Assault Response Program Coordinator, says she was drawn to her job as she knew from living in a small community that women take the brunt of most stressors in society.
When Celine received her first SARP crisis call to attend the hospital, she realized just how important her role is. She was able to provide immediate support and comfort to the survivor and was able to connect her to other services in less than 24 hours, which is not something a survivor would normally experience.
Port Alberni is an old mill town with a population of approximately 17,600 people, including more than 120 people who are currently living homeless. This town was also once home to the Alberni Indian Residential School, and many local Indigenous people have been directly and intergenerationally affected by the trauma experienced as a result.
Celine makes note that mental health and addictions issues are clearly visible in the downtown area, near where ACAWS is located.
ACAWS now has six trained SARP volunteers with 11 more being trained in the next round. When a sexual assault survivor arrives at the local hospital, a forensic nurse examiner will call ACAWS’ dispatch directly to ask for a volunteer.
SARP volunteers are equipped with a backpack containing extra clothing in various sizes, extra socks and underwear, water, snacks, service pamphlets and hygiene products. Volunteers can also arrange for transportation so survivors can leave the hospital safely. In addition, volunteers are available to stay during the forensic examination at the request of the survivor.
The volunteers are arranged into teams of two and they rotate every four days, resulting in each volunteer being on-call for approximately four evenings out of the month, which helps to cover those times when ACAWS staff are not able to respond.
Many acknowledge that the COVID-19 pandemic has come with increased concerns for people at risk for domestic and intimate partner violence. However, Celine and her team are very aware that sexual assaults often happen on a daily basis. Many simply aren’t reported as survivors hesitate to go to the local RCMP or the hospital.
Celine and her team hope that with the support and education that SARP can offer, this can be changed.
In 2020/2021, Port Alberni had a total of nine calls for a forensic nurse. Since launching SARP on July 1, ACAWS has already responded to 15 calls.
Fifteen survivors, all female, between the ages of 17 to 56, who were accompanied to the hospital and received care and personal support. All but four of these women were Indigenous. Three out of the 15 did not have a home, and 12 out of the 15 knew their attacker. Eight out of the 15 women had been sexually assaulted before.
Out of all 15 survivors accompanied by a member of the SARP team, only three of them had a friend or family member present. This means that if one of the team members hadn’t been there, the survivor would have undergone the forensic examination alone after being hurt and traumatized. Out of the 15 women who were accompanied, five needed a safe ride home but had no money for a cab or bus, so the team member was able to assist. Out of the 15 women, six needed to submit their clothing for forensic examination. The team member was able to provide new underwear, socks, a t-shirt and leggings. Had SARP not been there, the women would have left with only hospital clothes.
These small details are incredibly healing when it comes to the traumatic impact of a sexual assault, short and long-term. In addition, for the survivors who are interested in referrals and other support services, these can be provided in less than 24 hours.
“What inspires me in this work is the advocacy I witness in my colleagues, the dedication in my volunteers, and the incredible resilience of our survivors,” said Celine.
ACAWS Sexual Assault Response Program enables volunteers to advocate for sexual assault survivors, bridge gaps, and connect survivors to other services. Most importantly, SARP offers one-on-one emotional support from a trauma-informed perspective. At ACAWS, volunteers receive 20 hours of trauma-informed training and monthly meetings to continually build knowledge through workshops, activities and collaboration.
Through SARP, ACAWS also organizes educational community events and collaborates alongside the RCMP and mental health service providers.
Celine is also working on other educational initiatives and workshops, such as a two-day workshop for partners of sexual assault survivors and trauma-informed yoga for survivors of sexual assault, which is much needed in the community.
Going forward, ACAWS hopes to start community educational initiatives such as training for other organizations and public awareness campaigns.
Celine and her team advocate for more trauma-informed education with community partners, including the RCMP. “We are lucky to have many informed officers in our community who have gone out of their way to learn more about our program and how to better serve survivors of sexual assault. However, the more work we do in this field, the more gaps and barriers you can’t help but see. I hope, as a team, we can help minimize these. “
“Our educational pieces and the discussions we host with countless other agencies and services in town is really where our real work is,” said Celine. “We are big on collaboration and education. I just really want to express the importance of this program for our community and any gaps we see we aim to fill.”
Learn more about programs and services at the Alberni Community & Women’s Services Society:
Drop-in Centre: A program, accessible with its own entrance, where clients can help themselves to coffee and snacks while they watch television, make phone calls, read a book, or access one of our public computers. We also have racks of donated clothing and household goods offered for free. The drop-in coordinator creates themes for each day of the week, and clients can drop in for “Mindful Monday,” “Crafting Tuesday,” “Women’s Only Wednesday,” and “Popcorn & Movies Thursday.” Our coordinator brings in guest speakers, Elders to lead circles or tell stories, community volunteers who come in and teach crafts like quilting, sewing, painting, etc.
Unfortunately, due to COVID restrictions, our drop-in centre has been “window access only,” where clients can come by and express their needs through a drive-through window, and materials can be passed on. We also hand out safe injection kits, hygiene packs, Naloxone kits, cellphones and can make referrals to other services or offer on-site emotional support.
Community-Based Victim Services: Offers emotional support, referrals, information, and assistance and accompaniment through the judicial system for all adults and youth who are victims of intimate violence (including historical or recent sexual assault, stalking, abusive relationship, child abuse, etc.). A coordinator works collaboratively alongside RCMP and is the only one in the community which offers third-party reporting.
Outreach: A program coordinator works with youth and adults struggling with mental health and addictions and/or who are at risk of experiencing or have a history of intimate violence. Outreach can offer emotional support, referrals to other services, assistance with errands, accompaniment to appointments, help with budgeting, schoolwork, goal planning, and securing housing.
Stopping The Violence Program: Individual and group support (Making Connections Program) for women who have experienced or are experiencing intimate violence. This program comes from a trauma-informed, feminist perspective and believes that women can be their own heroes. Stopping The Violence offers a community connection to other women, empowerment, teaches coping skills, educates on the patterns of abuse and violence, offers emotional support, and goal making.
PEACE (Prevention, Education, Advocacy, Counselling, & Empowerment) Program: Individual counselling and group education for children and youth ages 3 to 18 who have been exposed to family and other relationship violence. The PEACE program aims to keep non-offending parents, guardians, or caregivers included in the education and counselling by empowering them to learn how to better support a child or youth. Due to COVID policies, the PEACE program has been offered completely virtually.
Port Alberni Transition House: A temporary emergency shelter for women over the age of 19 and their children fleeing abuse. The Transition House offers emotional support, referrals, meals, transportation, information and assistance, and accompaniment to important appointments.
Native Courtworker and Counselling Association of British Columbia
The Indigenous Victim Services Program (IVS program) works alongside the Native Courtworker and Counselling Association of B.C. in Prince George and in Campbell River and remote northern Indigenous communities on Vancouver Island.
The new IVS program delivers emergency counselling services that are culturally relevant, culturally safe, and trauma-informed for Indigenous sexual assault survivors. Indigenous Victim Service Workers are accessed through community-based direct referrals and are open to helping any Indigenous person (First Nations, Inuit, Métis) over the age of 12 years.
Jolene, who is a survivor of gender-based violence and helps run the IVS program, believes it is a privilege help other survivors who are facing multiple barriers to the support they need. “The acknowledgement I receive from the clients I work with is indescribable. To see the face of survivors leave with a look of relief on their faces, knowing they have been heard is why I do what I do. I truly believe I was born to be a voice of change and acknowledgement. I come from a long line of strong Indigenous women and believe that those strengths were passed down to me for this very reason.”
The Indigenous Victim Service Worker program recently received $497,964 over three years in provincial funding through the Ending Violence Association of BC, and the IVS program team says it’s making real and meaningful changes for Indigenous survivors in their communities. The team says this work is about breaking down society barriers, such as discrimination and racism that is entrenched within systems including health care, justice, social-services and family services – to create safe pathways for Indigenous survivors of all genders.
Indigenous service workers like Jolene help create individualized safety plans for survivors, which include referrals to services that meet the specific needs of their clients. Workers walk alongside survivors as they navigate the criminal justice system by providing counselling, and practical assistance such as helping them fill-out forms, travel and communication. They also maintain contact and network with community service providers and criminal justice system personnel to provide a safe and effective referral base.
Workers with the program also raise awareness through outreach and education around justice and issues such as barriers to services, ongoing victimization of Indigenous survivors of sexual assault, including those who identify as male, female or 2SLGBTQ+.
Jolene says that this program has helped “open doors” for Indigenous survivors so they can access practical, low-barrier assistance that focuses on their individual strengths and needs – in communities that lack trusted supports, specifically for them. “With residential school victim and intergeneration trauma playing a huge factor in many clients lives, I have found that clients are more comfortable working with Indigenous based victim services. Even in my personal experiences working with my family members, they would rather work with Indigenous based services.”
Creating safe pathways for Indigenous survivors of all genders to navigate systems safely and seamlessly is critical for the team at the IVW program.
If there were one thing that can be done to make things better for survivors, the IVW program staff knows first-hand how important it is to move from fragmented services to coordinated, integrated services that bridge gaps and build understanding of the need for culturally relevant, person-centered, judgement-free and safe services..
Learn more about the Indigenous Victim Services Program and the Native Courtworker and Counselling Association of B.C.
SAFE Society, Salmon Arm
The SAFE Society in Salmon Arm has worked in the anti-violence sector since 1979. Currently, it provides a continuum of services from emergency/crisis-oriented programs to long-term counselling and support.
For years, SAFE has operated a 24-hour Transition House and crisis line. They often received calls for support from both survivors and others in the community looking for resources and support for people who have been sexually assaulted. This created intense pressure as there was a lack of options for survivors, including limited after-hours or weekend help.
The SAFE Society services a unique, vast geographical area of the Columbia/Shuswap, with the city of Salmon Arm a service hub to numerous smaller, rural communities spread over a large physical area on all sides of Salmon Arm. There are also four different Indigenous communities in the region with varied governance and services.
Many of the communities in the Shuswap are isolated from direct service providers. The Shuswap Lake General Hospital, courthouse, and most other services are in Salmon Arm and transportation options to larger, regional hubs such as Vernon and Kamloops are limited.
The hospital in Salmon Arm is also smaller and does not have all of the services available in larger centres. Some smaller communities have their own RCMP detachment, while others do not. All of which can create significant barriers for survivors.
The population in the area, which is a tourist destination, is much higher during the summer months, which places additional demands on service providers.
SAFE operates a number of programs which include a Transition House with a 24-hour crisis line, PEACE Program, Stopping the Violence, Community Counselling, Community Based Victim Services, Outreach, Communication and Family Violence Prevention, Police Based Victim Services, and a new Sexual Assault Support Services program funded by a provincial grant administered through the Ending Violence Association of BC.
The new program extends the services of a community-based victim services program with a designated office and support workers, available 24 hours a day to respond to sexual assaults. This includes accompaniment to police, hospital and transition house by a trained team member, as well as information on sexual assault, reporting options and resources available.
The team at SAFE is aware that many people who are impacted by sexual assault or sexual violence do not report to the police, seek medical care, or receive proper support and counselling. They see the impacts of this in people's lives for years and generations afterward. SAFE has also heard from other providers and community members who are desperate to find help for a survivor but with few options. SAFE has met with many champions who are passionate about supporting sexual assault survivors and helping to create better outcomes.
With the new Sexual assault Support Services program, support workers are available day or night to accompany survivors to court and assist with statements or applications. They can also provide referrals for legal advice, including low or no-cost options, counselling, and other important assistance such as safety planning or protective orders.
The support workers can also help with access to practical needs like housing, transportation and food. The support workers will collaborate with other programs, with consent, for wrap-around care to best support survivors and help with access to appropriate referrals for children and non-offending family members. In addition, the program works on collaboration initiatives, education and prevention programs in the community.
Support workers also provide emotional support through what may be a very long process and bridge any gap while survivors are on a waitlist for counselling.
Assistance with transportation to services located outside of the area is a critical function of the new program. For example, SAFE Society staff can drive a survivor to Vernon or Kamloops to have an evidence kit collected and held at the hospital. Currently, the only option in Salmon Arm is for evidence kits to be turned over to the police immediately, which is not always something a survivor is ready to do directly following a trauma.
In addition, satellite office locations are being set up in rural and remote areas of the region, which will allow the program to provide support for people without the barrier of transportation.
All of these new services are crucial for a survivor to regain their sense of well-being and safety after a sexual assault. In addition, the new program helps other providers because, with a support worker to assist them, they are no longer pressured to know everything when it comes to responding to a sexual assault.
The SAFE Society knows first-hand that services that can support a survivor and provide all the information they need to make informed decisions is the best step towards healing. SAFE also expects to see an increased number of survivors getting the medical attention they need and finding the courage to make reports to police to keep communities safer.
If there was one thing the SAFE Society would like to make things better for survivors, it would be the creation of province-wide, dedicated and specialized support services so that all survivors have the best chance for recovery. SAFE believes that consistent, province-wide practices that provide more reporting choices, such as third-party reporting and options to store evidence kits at hospitals, along with timely referrals to community-based supports, will further help those rebuilding a life following an assault.
The SAFE Society strives to provide services that are feminist, intersectional, trauma-informed, anti-oppressive, and client centered. The society recognizes that persons from marginalized communities are disproportionately affected by violence and are actively working to reduce barriers to access in programs.
More information on the work of the SAFE Society in Salmon Arm.
Qwí:qwelstóm wellness program
The Qwí:qwelstóm wellness program operates under the Stó:lō Service Agency. Qwí:qwelstóm promotes a form of healing that focuses on relationships and the interconnectedness of all living things. Honouring S’í:wes te Siyolexwálh (teachings/upbringing from our ancestors), the Qwí:qwelstóm wellness workers support people who need assistance with their journey towards a balance of emotional, spiritual, physical, and mental wellbeing.
The Qwí:qwelstóm wellness workers are available to support Indigenous people wanting to bring balance and harmony back to their lives at any point in their healing journey.
Qwí:qwelstóm provides services to anyone who identifies as Indigenous and is seeking services within S'ólh Téméxw (Stó:lō traditional territory) spanning from Hope to Fort Langley, B.C., on both sides of the Fraser River. Qwí:qwelstóm also provides prevention and intervention training and resources to respond to sexual violence.
Qwí:qwelstóm strives to have dedicated services and support based on traditions and culture for people harmed by sexual violence.
Sexual violence within Indigenous communities and families is prevalent due to the intergenerational effects of residential school, foster care and colonization. Subsequently, there is a need for support and healing groups for people harmed by sexual violence that are culturally based. With the support from leadership, an Elders’ Panel, and community champions, the Stó:lō Service Agency is moving forward to address sexual violence in S'ólh Téméxw through the Qwí:qwelstóm Sexual Violence Response Team (the Team). The two overarching objectives for responding to sexual violence in Indigenous communities include:
With the support of provincial funding, the Team provides three-day training sessions to community champions and front-line staff members on responding to sexual violence disclosures in a compassionate and culturally sensitive manner. This means that those who are harmed can connect to someone they already have created a relationship with.
Currently, 62 responders have received the training and are prepared to support community members affected by sexual violence. In addition, a networking group is in place for first responders where they can get support and connect monthly to share resources, lessons learned and best practices.
With long-term funding, Qwí:qwelstóm can continue to provide training and support to respond to sexual violence in Indigenous communities and raise awareness in a holistic way.
Learn more about the Qwí:qwelstóm wellness program.
SALAL, Vancouver
Salal Sexual Violence Support Centre is a community-based rape crisis centre serving all women, trans, non-binary, two-spirit, and gender diverse survivors in Vancouver and the Lower Mainland.
Salal offers counselling, crisis response, accompaniment, emotional support and assistance in navigating the often-lengthy process involved following a sexual assault.
Salal knows that immediate access to counselling and support is crucial for survivors to be able to recover. For many, the lack of these resources has serious consequences on people’s lives, mental and physical health, and the ability to move forward.
Recent provincial funding, administered through the Ending Violence Association of B.C., has helped Salal better respond to the needs of survivors with increased capacity and crisis response work covered by a dedicated team. This includes emergency accompaniment to hospital, police, court, and follow-up medical services such as mental health assessments, medical termination of pregnancies, and treatment for sexually transmitted infections.
For Ashley, Salal’s Manager of Victim Service and Volunteer Programs, it’s the strength and courage of survivors and being part of their healing journey that inspires the Salal team in their work.
When survivors share how Salal has positively impacted them and supported them through their trauma, Ashley and her team are inspired to continue.
In recent years, Salal has been recognized as a community leader for their advocacy and inclusion of trans, queer and non-binary people. For the team at Salal, which has been in operation for nearly 40 years, it is those who are too often marginalized who experience a disproportional amount of sexualized violence and suffer the most when services and supports are not readily available.
Although there have been advances made in understanding trauma and the complex needs of survivors, access to community-based emergency services remain a lifeline and reduce the long-terms effects of trauma.
Salal’s ultimate aim is to challenge and change thinking, actions and systems that contribute to violence against women. This means both supporting women who have experienced any form of sexualized violence and engagement with youth to develop knowledge and leadership, as well as the local community for prevention of future violence.
“There are so many ways we can support survivors,” said Ashley. “Addressing the harm caused by sexualized violence motivates all of us, and I am inspired by the courage of survivors and their desire to support others and give back to the community.”
Learn more about programs and services at SALAL.
PACE Society
PACE Society is a "by, with, and for" organization for sex workers of all genders and delivers peer-led inclusive services since their inception in 1994. For over twenty-five years, PACE has worked to provide frontline peer support services to sex workers while working toward broader social change to improve conditions for sex workers and address social inequalities that lead to survival sex work and decreased autonomy, including exploitation and trafficking.
At PACE Society, the programs and services are designed and delivered largely by peers (current or former sex workers). The lived and living experiences of the members is honoured by involving them in the development, implementation, and evaluation of programs and services.
PACE takes a harm reduction, trauma-informed approach to service and program delivery. They provide peer-driven, non-judgmental, accessible programs and services that reflect the self-identified needs and realities of their members, including sex workers who use substances.
Recent provincial funding of $250,000, administered through the Ending Violence Association of BC, has allowed PACE to expand their Support Services Program, which is the backbone of the organization.
The Support Services Program offers free, confidential, trauma-informed, and sex work informed services. It includes one-on-one support and counselling, drop-in services, and peer outreach and harm reduction.
“We have been able to expand our support offerings and reduce our waitlist, ensuring that members are able to receive the support they need in a more sustainable approach,” says nour, Acting Executive Director at PACE. “It has also meant that staff members are feeling more supported in their work, leading to less burnout in the field.”
In the future, PACE wants to expand offerings to include Indigenous traditional cultural healing practices, as well as other modes of support services that meet the needs of the diverse population they serve.
nour has spent the last decade dedicating herself to the work of supporting survivors and ending gender-based violence. Through her volunteer work over 10 years ago, she was introduced to the concept of intersectionality, first coined by Kimberlee Crenshaw. Since then, intersectionality has been expanded to include other systems of oppression (e.g., ableism, racism, homophobia and transphobia, im/migration status, etc.). The descriptions related to intersectionality helped her connect with her own intersecting 'knot of contradictions', being a queer, Muslim, Arab and a Woman of Colour.
“I have grown to not only understand but embrace my intersecting identity and recognize the importance of having diverse and lived experiences in the work of supporting survivors. What continues to inspire me are folks who occupy these varying intersections and who are doing the work to support those who may not have been supported in the past due to these same intersecting systems of oppression.” says nour.
“If we could do one thing to make things better for survivors it would be to continue expanding support services,” says nour. “Ensuring not only sustainable one-on-one support and counselling, but also going beyond North American understanding of support and healing.”
Learn more about programs and services at the PACE Society.
Family Services of Greater Vancouver Supporting Youth at Risk of Exploitation and Trafficking
The team at Family Services of Greater Vancouver (FSGV) know firsthand that young people have a right to a life free from violence and the team has made it a mission to end the all too prevalent crime of youth trafficking and exploitation.
Most people can relate to what it is like to be young, wanting to fit in and be accepted but too often feeling insecure and uncertain about who they are and how others may see them. A seasoned predator will be on the look out for vulnerabilities in young people that can be exploited, and they do this by showering the youth with compliments, attention, gifts and even love.
This tactic is referred to as grooming, luring or needs bombing and may be how a predator controls and influences a young person, often without the youth realizing it. The young person may see the predator as a friend and someone who provides for their needs. They may also see the predator as someone to be feared and may be hesitant to ask for help.
“As a society, we have to do more to protect our youth and show them that we care about their well-being,” says Brenda Lochhead, FSGV victim support worker. “Crimes against youth are often purposeful, which means deliberate and planned. They are also more common than we may think, and the young victims could be any one’s child or family member.”
To effectively address community needs relating to exploitation, the Vancouver Police Department and FSGV work collaboratively within the Counter Exploitation Unit to support victims. The counter-exploitation unit is a partnership between victim service workers and detectives that supports victims of sexual exploitation and human trafficking from when they realize that they have been exploited, through the investigation process and, ultimately, the criminal-justice system. It was the first of its kind in Canada and Brenda’s innovative approach has set a national standard for how to approach human trafficking and exploitation cases.
“When we are talking power-based crimes such as human trafficking and sexual exploitation it is a person’s access to agency and autonomy that is taken away from them by traffickers to gain power and control over them,” said Brenda.
The Counter Exploitation Unit responds to cases of sexual exploitation and human trafficking, and provides trauma-informed support for victims, which is crucial to encourage their participation in the criminal justice system and secure their long-term health and wellbeing.
Building trust with victims and survivors is a core tenet of Brenda’s success, with outcomes that improve the quality of life for young people who have been harmed and increase the odds of convicting a perpetrator. FSGV works with and represents the victim and also understands how to navigate the justice system, which is integral to giving survivors the best chance at their own version of justice and supporting survivors’ autonomy in seeking justice.
Victim service workers like Brenda ensure that survivors have access to support resources while they rebuild their lives in the months or years before a trial takes place, and often continues to support them in their journey long after the trial has concluded.
Expanding the Counter Exploitation Unit was identified as a priority in Safe and Supported, B.C.’s Gender-Based Violence Action Plan and B.C. is working in partnership with the federal government on this initiative. Recent funding through the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence has provided FSGV the opportunity to expand beyond service delivery. The Counter Exploitation Unit provides a partnership model which could be replicated in other jurisdictions across B.C. With a focus on community outreach and education, the team is also able to train front-line workers from across the social services sector and beyond, working with people who interact with children and youth and who have a role in protecting them, including healthcare professionals, teachers and youth workers. FSGV will also be working with journalists because the media has an opportunity to advance the conversation around youth exploitation and help all of society come together to end youth trafficking and exploitation.
FSGV has been supporting the local community since 1928, which is nearly 100 years. FSGV specializes in providing support for children, youth and families in crisis—through a variety of crisis response and counselling programs, as well as community education.
FSGV programs include:
Learn more about Family Services of Greater Vancouver.
Learn more about recent funding provided to FSGV.
Support for FSGV and the Counter Exploitation Unit furthers the ongoing work under Safe and Supported, B.C.’s Gender-Based Violence Action Plan.
If you or someone you know is at risk of or being trafficked, the following resources are also available:
Victoria Sexual Assault Centre (VSAC)
The Victoria Sexual Assault Centre is a feminist organization committed to ending sexualized violence through healing, education, and prevention.
The Victoria Sexual Assault Centre (VSAC) started out in 1982 with two volunteers in a basement suite. Forty years later, VSAC has grown to more than thirty staff and a large community volunteer base dedicated to supporting survivors in the aftermath of an assault and on the road to healing.
VSAC is widely regarded as one of the best models in B.C. for integrated emergency sexual assault services. They are dedicated to supporting women and all Trans survivors of sexual assault and childhood sexual abuse, through advocacy, counselling and empowerment
Elijah Zimmerman, VSAC’s Executive Director, was drawn to this work in healing and prevention having witnessed the far-reaching impacts of sexualized violence on people, families and communities. Elijah was particularly impacted by how survivors often carry not only the trauma of a specific act of sexualized violence, but also the trauma of receiving no support, or support that further shames or isolates the survivor.
“I’m inspired by this work because a healing path of dignity and respect is possible and we can transform our communities and systems towards better practices of prevention,” said Elijah. “Working to end sexualized violence uplifts us all.”
Recent provincial funding of $441,788 administered through the Ending Violence Association of BC covers services that were previously at-risk due to uncertain and temporary funding.
These services include VSAC’s integrated, wrap-around Clinic that serves recent sexual assault survivors 13 years and older, their Access Line (often first point of contact), and adequate staffing for crisis counselling, victim service support and a sexual assault response team.
“We’re finding an increased need in crisis services and this past year, we’ve had more need for our Clinic than ever before,” said Elijah. “With this funding, survivors can feel confident our services will be here when they need them.”
The new funding also enabled VSAC to hire an Outreach Worker with a primary focus on community building and sharing resources within a network of other service delivery organizations.
“Having confirmed funding for longer than a year has ensured our services can remain available and stable while also affording us time to better plan for current and emergent needs for survivors,” said Elijah. “In this planning, we’ve been able to identify important adjustments so we can reach communities and survivors who are most impacted by sexualized violence.”
In Elijah’s experience, sexualized violence being recognized as a significant public health issue requiring mainstream prevention and education would really benefit survivors.
Elijah affirms that services like VSAC fill a critical health need in communities and having appropriate funding means staff can be proactive and responsive to those needs.
The Victoria Sexual Assault Centre provides the following services:
Learn more about the Victoria Sexual Assault Centre.
Gender equity means all people are treated fairly and have the same opportunities.
View information about the Gender Equity Office and gender equity in B.C.
Monday, September 16, 2024
Joanne Whittier
Joanne.Whittier@gov.bc.ca
250 893-5650