Thank you.
It is with great honour and humbleness that I present today in front of the committee on such an important matter, not only for the teams I represent, but for many elders across our nation.
Catholic Social Services in Edmonton developed the elder abuse resource and supports to work with low- to medium-risk cases and to answer Edmonton's elder abuse intake line. We also partnered with the elder abuse intervention team, which deals with the high-risk files. Our teams are dedicated to ensuring that the issue of elder abuse does not remain in tabooed silence within Canadian society any longer.
The proposed amendment to Bill C-36 within the Criminal Code and its support to date show that our federal government also recognizes the need to bring the problem of elder abuse to the forefront for serious examination. From the current literature, any opposition to this amendment has focused on the need to do more, concurring with the position presented today.
The proposed amendment states:
evidence that the offence had a significant impact on the victim, considering their age and other personal circumstances, including their health and financial situation,
l'd like to focus on the words “significant impact”, for those who have not been directly involved in elder abuse, for the purpose of gaining understanding of the full depth of this impact and all of its intricacies.
I personally have witnessed a senior pulling her hair out while crying as she disclosed the torment her drug-addicted son had put her through. Take a moment, if you will, to reflect on the word “torment”. What comes to mind? You might be wondering if he begged her for money so that he could buy drugs or took family heirlooms to pawn for drug money. Yes, but this senior also disclosed the horror of how one night, in a drug-induced rage, he also took her by the hair and dragged her downstairs with a knife held to her throat and held her hostage. The words "significant impact" or even “torment” don't seem to suffice. I could quite literally provide pages of case scenarios that highlight how detrimental and heartbreaking these significant impacts can be on a senior's health and well-being.
The impact of financial abuse on a senior is also devastating. Last year our team was involved in investigating a financial abuse case where the alleged amount the couple was defrauded of was upwards of several million dollars. Surprisingly, this large amount of money was taken from a very typical middle-class elderly couple by their grandchild. The subsequent wreckage resulted in the couple having to claim bankruptcy, sell their family home, and shamefully face those whom they could not repay. The disruption to a senior's life, anyone's life, in a situation like this does not have a dollar figure; it goes so much more beyond that.
It is also important to note that our team's focus on health encompasses not only physical health but psychological, social, and spiritual well-being. Health Canada defined healthy aging as “a lifelong process” of optimizing opportunities for improving and preserving health, physical, social, and mental wellness, independence, quality of life, and enhancing successful life-course transitions. When even one of these areas is compromised, let alone all of them, there is greater risk of decline in a senior's overall health due to some of the damage being irrevocable.
Abuse is trauma. In a seminar by Dr. Covington, an expert in trauma, it was stated that:
Exposure to trauma can create a PTSD response in the limbic system. ... Trauma disrupts the chemistry of the brain and can predispose a [person] to alcohol and drug use, eating disorders, self-injuring behaviour, and mental health problems.
An article in the National Institute of Justice Journal reported that dementia in seniors can compound the trauma of sexual assault. One study showed that 11 out of 20 elderly sexual assault victims died within one year of their assault.
Through our involvement with abused seniors, we have seen that compromised social and spiritual health can result in depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation, and other mental health issues. It should also be mentioned that the guilt a senior carries with them when they find themselves in an abusive situation can be extremely burdensome, due to the fact that many abusers are their own sons and daughters who they raised to the best of their abilities, or a grandchild they once wholeheartedly welcomed into this world, not faceless strangers to whom they have fallen prey.
For these reasons, and many more, having a criminal system that supports weighing these impacts upon sentencing could end up lacking in measurable change within elder abuse when many of the seniors do not want a criminal investigation brought against their loved one. There is, without a doubt, a time and a place for the sentencing for those who perpetrate elder abuse, but in many cases, what is of more importance is that there are resources, funding, and supports needed for people to do the work required to see a senior through to the other side of an abusive situation.
The legislative summary released in April of this year brought to light very clearly that
a review of the literature on elder abuse noted that “[c]riminal law is used less frequently to address abuse and neglect of older persons than abuse of other persons”.
According to our team statistics, from December to May of this year emotional abuse comprised almost 30% of our caseload. Emotional abuse is rarely if ever covered in a criminal investigation as a chargeable offence. For this reason, many callers to our intake line in Edmonton share their high level of frustration or sense of injustice after having reported elder abuse as the commercials and posters told them to do. They do not realize the limitations upon interventions—legislation and so forth. Therefore, it is hoped that our federal government's dedication to this issue not end here.
Respectfully recommended for consideration is continued dedication of or an increase in funds to support social services programs that staff such teams. More equitable pay is a serious factor, as many of these workers come from non-profit organizations within the community and there is high turnover from losing them to government-funded positions at higher wages. Further, there should be focus on supporting interventions, public education, and pressure for the review of provincial laws and legislation within which an abuser can actually be protected.
I thank the committee once again for its initial steps in honouring the elderly and more vulnerable population of Canada. I welcome any questions you may have, on behalf of our team's experience within this challenging field.