'Insulting': Intimate partner violence study cut short as Ontario eyes early election
The Canadian Press · The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Victims of intimate partner violence and their supporters are upset after early election speculation forced an Ontario legislative committee to cut short what was supposed to be an exhaustive study of the issue.

A possible spring election forced one of the committee’s leaders to expedite the study's timeline with the goal of completing a report by February, while the other leader called the situation a "farce."

The justice policy subcommittee, co-led by a Progressive Conservative and a New Democrat, completed Phase 1 of its work after listening to nearly 90 subject-matter witnesses over the summer.

The committee had grand plans that included travelling across the province to hear from survivors, with a key trip to Renfrew County in eastern Ontario to meet with those involved in a seminal coroner's inquest into the murders of three area women – Nathalie Warmerdam, Carol Culleton and Anastasia Kuzyk – at the hands of a former partner.

Now, the trip to Renfrew has been cancelled and those discussions with survivors will occur either at Queen's Park in Toronto or over video calls.

"I don't know if there will be an early election, but given everything is possible and given everything that we've worked on, I'm expediting the timeline," said Jess Dixon, the Progressive Conservative co-lead of the committee.

Premier Doug Ford has not ruled out calling an early election in 2025 instead of sticking with the date set for June 2026.

The changes do not sit well with New Democrat Kristyn Wong-Tam, the committee's other leader.

"This whole process is very much becoming a farce," Wong-Tam said.

Dixon, a former Crown attorney who prosecuted numerous domestic violence cases and who was recently acclaimed as the Progressive Conservative candidate for Kitchener South-Hespeler, pledged to move the issue forward with the goal of producing long-lasting change for victims of intimate partner violence.

"This is incredibly important to me," Dixon said. "No one is going to be able to stop me from working on this and from advocating for this."

Her report with recommendations on a way forward is now expected to be completed in February 2025, at least two months earlier than planned.

Wong-Tam tabled a private member's bill in March that seeks to declare intimate partner violence an epidemic in Ontario.

The government initially signalled it would reject the idea, then voted in favour of the bill in April after second reading and sent it to committee for a well-resourced review – including money to take the committee on the road.