62 lives were taken by femicide in Ontario last year, including the killings of Indigenous women, girls and Two Spirit people, which Indigenous leaders and a National Inquiry have named as genocide. Those are only the confirmed cases. It is unknown how many remain unconfirmed. Tragically, these are often preventable deaths.
Today, finding safety is harder than ever for women and children fleeing violence. If we do not act earlier to prevent violence, the human, social and economic costs will continue to cascade into hospitals, schools, social services, courtrooms, mental health and addictions services, employment and across generations and communities.
Gender-based violence (GBV) is a leading cause of housing insecurity and homelessness for women and gender-diverse people and we know it is one of the main reasons they remain in unsafe situations. There is currently a lack of access to safe and affordable housing. Existing housing models fail to account for survivors’ unique needs, forcing them to choose between unsafe homes or precarious, hidden homelessness.
We need the political will and commitment of our elected leaders to address the root causes of gender-based violence. Economic prosperity and financial independence deeply influence a person’s ability to leave a violent situation, as does one’s social identity. When governments and policymakers address gender-based violence and intimate partner violence through meaningful investments into violence prevention, early intervention, and survivor support services, they are investing in a province where women, girls, and gender diverse people are able to thrive and live lives free from violence.
This election, let’s urge all political candidates to:
- Declare intimate partner violence an epidemic to acknowledge the public health and safety crisis.
- Establish an independent accountability mechanism to advance community-led long-term planning efforts to address and eradicate gender-based violence and to ensure leadership and accountability across parties and election cycles.
- Fund and sustain the solutions required to respond to and prevent gender-based violence.
There are decades worth of hard lessons from femicide inquests, death reviews, public commissions and national inquiries that have shown us, over and over, how to prevent these predictable deaths by prioritizing healthy relationships and listening to the voices of those most impacted. We will be better positioned to end gender-based violence when we target the root causes of the social inequities and injustices that continue to disadvantage and discriminate against whole populations. The first-hand wisdom found in those communities must help lead us.
99 local governments in Ontario have declared intimate partner violence an epidemic.
The province can too.
This provincial election, we urge all political parties to commit to ending gender-based violence. Together, we can achieve this important and critical goal.