Good afternoon, honourable members and fellow witnesses.
Thank you for the opportunity to speak today. My name is Karla Andrich and my pronouns are she/her.
I am joining you today from the Treaty One territory, which is the traditional territory of the Anishinabe, Nêhiyawak, Oji-Cree, Dakota and Dene peoples, and the heart of the Métis Nation.
My personal relationship to those treaties is that I am a descendant of settlers. My great-grandparents and great-great-grandparents built their generational wealth from land that was never ceded. I carry the benefit of that wealth and also the responsibility to work toward justice and decolonization.
I am a counsellor at Klinic Community Health, an agency in Winnipeg, Manitoba. We've been in operation for about 50 years. We promote health and quality of life for people of every age, background, ethnicity, ability, gender identity and socio-economic circumstance.
I’ll be speaking today through the lens of my work, providing one-on-one trauma counselling with survivors of sexualized violence, the vast majority of whom are women, girls, and gender minorities, with the acknowledgement that indigenous and 2SLGBTQIA+ folks are disproportionately targeted by those who perpetuate sexualized harm.
I hope to bring your attention to three main points today: the harm that systemic sexualized violence perpetuates; the need for trauma-informed care within systems; and the need for greater funding.
Sexualized violence is a web of daily microaggressions, systemic inequalities and acts of overt interpersonal violence, which include sexual assault, sexual harassment, gendered discrimination, and also the backlash that women, girls and gender minorities face when they speak out. It is also an integral part of colonial harm. Indigenous women, girls and two-spirit folks are disproportionately represented among the people that we see at the hospital through our advocacy work.
I have personally sat with so many indigenous folks at the Health Sciences Centre here in Winnipeg, from mature women, matriarchs of their families, to girls just 12 and 13 years old. So many of them tell me that this is just a reality in their families, that their mothers, grandmothers, aunts, cousins and siblings have all experienced some form of sexualized harm.
Contributing to this is the systemic lack of trauma-informed care in the justice system, the medical system and other supports, such as EIA, colleges of physicians, and other peripheral systems that survivors may engage with. My first counselling job was at the University of Manitoba, and it broke my heart seeing the profound impact that experiencing this harm had on my clients.
Finally and crucially, access to counselling is underfunded. Many survivors can’t afford private therapy to help them recover from their traumatic experiences and spend months to years waiting for care at agencies like Klinic. This translates to months and years of greatly diminished quality of life, lost opportunities, lost jobs, education, relationships and contributions to their communities.
My suggestions for action today are that it is imperative we value the lives, futures and happiness of women, girls and gender minorities as equal to those of men and boys. We need to more deeply commit to implementing the 94 calls to action put forth by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, especially calls to action 21 through 24, and 41. Trauma-informed training should become mandatory for any person or agency which provides care, reviews complaints or enforces laws or policies around sexualized harm. Finally, we need to greatly increase funding for survivors to access free counselling, legal support, system navigation support and advocacy.
My team at Klinic consists of just two full-time and two part-time counsellors. We have a coordinator. We have a few part-time advocates. We have volunteers of whom we ask too much, because the need is so great.
Essentially, we need more money. Every agency that provides this kind of care needs more money. We are stretched thin and constantly are trying to balance the needs of our crisis program, which intervenes for people in the immediate aftermath of a sexual assault, and our counselling program, which provides ongoing therapy and public education.
We are constantly stealing from Peter to pay Paul. Ultimately, it's the survivors who suffer. Money is how we as a society indicate how important a particular issue is to us. Canada needs to invest in our women, girls and gender minorities.
At Klinic, we deeply appreciate the money that has come to Manitoba recently to help bolster our crisis services. It would be very helpful to also get money to support the other half of our advocacy and counselling work, which is for ongoing support for people, as these kinds of experiences take time, effort, and support to recover from.
Thank you very much for your time today.