Labrador women's group researching housing to help Indigenous women escaping violence - Action News
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Labrador women's group researching housing to help Indigenous women escaping violence

As a community organization works to study second stage housing in Labrador, an advocate says safe, affordable housing is one of the keys to combating violence against Indigenous women.

Advocate Charlotte Wolfrey says shelters are good but there needs to be a home for women

A woman smiles next to a pile of stones. There's snow all around her.
Charlotte Wolfrey is the former AngajukKak of Rigolet and an advocate for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. (Eldred Allen/Bird's Eye Inc)

As a community organization works to study second-stage housing in Labrador, an advocate says safe, affordable housing is one of the keys to combating violence against Indigenous women.

The Mokami Status of Women Council has been running an eight-apartment supportive living program for around a decade. Now it has received funding to look at addressing the gaps for when people are ready to live independently.

"There is a lack of affordable and safe spaces for women and gender diverse people to go," said Stacey Hoffee, executive director of the Mokami Status of Women Council.

The organizationreceived $25,000 to explore second-stage housing to create safe, affordable housing. Hoffe said a consultant from Common Good Solutions in Halifax will be working in Labrador this summer.

Hoffe said she hopes that work can address thegaps. She said the consultant is meeting with a number of front-line workers, people who use the shelter system, organizations and more.

Indigenous women are disproportionately affected by violence in Canada. The RCMP says Indigenous women are 4times more likely to be murdered than all other women in Canada.

A woman sits in a chair holding a small child.
Deidre Marie Michelin holds one of her four children. Charlotte Wolfrey says Michelin loved her children and the Inuit way of life. (Supplied by Michelin family)

Rigolet's Charlotte Wolfrey knows the statistics personally.

Wolfrey's daughter, Deirdre Michelin, was 21 years old in January1993 when she made a distress call to the Happy Valley-Goose Bay RCMP, 160 kilometres away.

On the same day, she was shot and killed in a murder-suicide by her domestic partner.

Michelin had four children, was a good cook,good mother, loved the Inuit traditional way of life and being out on the land, Wolfrey said.

"I just want people to remember my daughter as she was in life, full of energy, good mom," Wolfrey said.

At the time, there were no police in the isolated community of Rigolet.

Wolfrey and others advocated to have policestationed in the communityand inMakkovik.Wolfrey said she still wants to see police stationed full time in Postvilleas well.

A woman is sitting on a large couch.
Michelin was 21 when she was murdered by her partner in Rigolet. (Submitted by Charlotte Wolfrey )

"There's still a long ways to go to make sure that women are safe," she said.

To combat violence against Indigenous women, a number of communities have safe houses and shelters and the Pauktuutit Inuit Women of Canada is helping communities apply for Inuit-specific shelters in their communities.

Wolfrey said while that's important, what happensafter women leave shelters needs to be looked attoo.

"The housing issue in all our communities is horrific and especially Hopedale and Nain," Wolfrey said.

"Once you go into the safe house, you're probably there for six weeks, two months, three months maximum and then you got to make some decisions about where you're going to live and when you got no housing, you got no other choice but to almost go back."

The federal housing advocate called housing in Nunatsiavut a human rights failureafter touring the region in 2022.

Nunatsiavut said housing was a priority during a recentvisit fromPrime Minister Justin Trudeau in May.At the time, Trudeau said the federal government was working closely with Indigenous communities on housing but didn't offer a timeline.

Two men walking down a hallway with a group of people behind them.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Nunatsiavut President Johannes Lampe met in Nain in June with the Inuit-Crown partnership committee. Trudeau said his government is working closely with Indigenous governments on housing. (Darren Calabrese/The Canadian Press)

Wolfrey said changes are needed now. TheNational Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls' final report was released in June2019.

Wolfrey would also like to see programming set up to help people understand healthy relationships and help couples heal together.

"If we don't have the men involved, we're not going to change things," Wolfrey said. "I hope for a Labrador that's safe for everyone."

An old photograph shows a priest holding a baby with a woman smiling beside them.
Wolfrey says she wants people to remember her daughter as being full of energy and a good mother. (Submitted by Charlotte Wolfrey)

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador