Native Women's Association Expands Safe Passage Online Platform

Indigenous Services Canada

Indigenous Peoples, particularly women, girls, and 2SLGBTQI+ people (MMIWG2S+), experience violence at a much higher rate than other populations in Canada. The disappearance and murder of Indigenous women, girls, and 2SLGBTQI+ people in Canada is an ongoing national crisis, which is due to the intergenerational trauma and marginalization caused by colonial policies rooted in racism and discrimination.

Today, Carol McBride, President of the Native Women's Association of Canada (NWAC), and Patty Hajdu, Minister of Indigenous Services, are highlighting the expansion of NWAC's Safe Passage initiative with new online tools, as well as the establishment of the Safe Passage Women's Safety Council.

Safe Passage is a community-driven, trauma-informed and survivor-centered safety initiative created and led by NWAC. The initiative tracks MMIWG2S+ cases, monitors ongoing safety concerns, provides distinctions-based safety resources, educates the public and media, and commemorates and honours the stolen loved ones of Indigenous people and families.

Last year, NWAC established the Safe Passage Women's Safety Council, comprised of representatives from NWAC's provincial and territorial member associations across the country, that will inform NWAC programming to support the safety and wellbeing of Indigenous women, girls and gender diverse people, as well as develop and deliver industry training, monitor ongoing safety concerns, and develop content for educational purposes.

In addition to the establishment of the Safe Passage Women's Safety Council, NWAC has also expanded it's Safe Passage web platform to include:

  • a new Unsafe Experiences Reporting Tool and Map that enables community members to anonymously share information about unsafe experiences and track unsafe location hotspots;
  • a Safe Passage Community Resources Map, which provides distinctions-based safety resources that can be filtered by region and resource type;
  • stories shared by survivors and families of missing or murdered Indigenous women, girls and 2SLGBTQI+ people, to recenter their voices and perspectives so they can be heard, believed, and valued; and,
  • registration for journalists to receive alerts and regular updates to help amplify MMIWG2S+ cases.

This important initiative will increase the safety and wellbeing of Indigenous women, girls, and 2SLGBTQI+ people. Indigenous Services Canada supported this work with an investment of $1.2 million through the Pathways to Safe Indigenous Communities Initiative.

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