North

Plan needed to prevent domestic violence, says N.W.T. coroner

The chief coroner of the N.W.T. said the territory needs a plan to prevent domestic and family violence, especially in communities without RCMP officers. Cathy Menard's report comes three years after a Gameti, N.W.T., woman died in 2009.

Coroner’s report comes 3 years after Gameti woman’s death

The chief coroner of the Northwest Territories wants to see a concrete plan to prevent domestic violence in the territory.

This is one of two recommendations Cathy Menard is now making following the 2009 death of Alice Black, a 31-year-old mother of seven.

Black died after being beaten by her common-law husband, Terry Vital, in Gameti, N.W.T. Vital pleaded guilty to manslaughter and is serving a seven-year sentence.

Menard said Black’s death was a wake-up call on just how much work still needs to be done to address family violence in the territory.

The chief coroner of the N.W.T., Cathy Menard, wants the government to make a concrete plan to prevent domestic and family violence in the territory. She said a plan like this would ensure Alice Black didn't die in vain. Black was beaten to death in 2009 by her common-law husband in Gameti, N.W.T. (CBC)

"Otherwise, Alice Black died in vain and we can’t have that," she said.

Menard is recommending that the territory create an action plan for people who face domestic violence, especially for those in communities with limited or no RCMP resources.

"We need some sort of plan… to protect people so they have something – whether it’s a place to go or a system in place, or people know protocols so they can get assistance. Figure it out. Every community with limited resources has to have a plan – bottom line," said Menard.

She wants front-line workers to address the issues and ensure community members report abuse.

Menard also wants to see the government, RCMP and other community organizations work together on the plan.

Menard is also recommending a long-term public education campaign, similar to an anti-smoking campaign, to curb the acceptance of domestic and family violence.

"It's not okay. There's that old saying 'it takes a village to raise a child', but it takes a village to protect each other too," she said.

The Yellowknife YWCA said the report comes two weeks after the territory ended some funding for programs in communities without family violence shelters. The YWCA said that four-year program provided a total of $1.2 million for community-based initiatives around prevention, advocacy and outreach.

Lyda Fuller from the YWCA said the report amounts to a renewed push for more attention to family violence in the North.