BWSS Hosts Provincial Roundtable on Gender Justice and Ending Violence

Today, gender justice and anti-violence organizations from across British Columbia met with Rechie Valdez, Canada’s Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Secretary of State for Small Business and Tourism.
Organizations representing the north-west and north coast, rural and remote communities, provincial associations, Indigenous and Black women’s organizations, law reform advocates, anti-violence programs, child care advocates, and sexual assault centres came together with a unified message: survivors, girls, women, and gender-diverse people frontline services, and equality movements across BC are speaking with one voice.

The roundtable opened with a territorial welcome from Summer Rain, Manager of the Justice Centre at BWSS, followed by a moment of silence honouring women and girls lost to femicide in BC.

To frame the discussion, participants introduced two powerful visuals: the “Wall of Rollback Receipts” documenting federal cuts and failures, and the “Equality Opportunities Wall – #DesignedWithSurvivors” outlining solutions and pathways forward.

A round-robin of interventions then followed, with organizations from across BC highlighting key themes: sector funding and stability, Indigenous women and MMIWG, rural and northern realities, Black and immigrant women’s leadership, law reform and justice, child care and the care economy, and girls’ safety and leadership.

Together, organizations presented a unified voice through three core asks:

  • Stable, core, multi-year funding for the sector.

  • Shifting investment toward the care economy, housing, and prevention.

  • Independent, survivor- and Indigenous-led accountability for the NAP and MMIWG Calls for Justice.

Minister Valdez was invited to reflect and asked for one clear commitment to carry forward to Cabinet. The meeting closed with a collective affirmation that survivors’ safety is public safety, and a shared commitment to follow up ahead of the Fall 2025 federal budget.

Statement from BC Gender Justice and Anti-Violence Organizations

An Urgent Meeting in an Urgent Time

We thank the Minister for her time and openness to hearing directly from frontline organizations. This meeting was an important opportunity for BC leaders to present evidence, experiences, and solutions rooted in the realities of survivors across our province.

  1. What we shared was clear: the situation facing women, girls, and gender-diverse people in BC is dire.
  • Every 6 days a woman in Canada is killed by her partner.
  • BC has some of the highest femicide rates in the country, with recent tragedies still fresh in our communities.
  • Resource extraction and man camps continue to put Indigenous women and girls at risk, in direct contradiction to the MMIWG Calls for Justice.
  • The National Action Plan on Gender-based Violence has not achieved enough profile and there is not commitment to continue beyond year 5.
  • The housing and child care crises traps survivors in unsafe situations and prevents them from building safe futures.
  • Digital misogyny and online harms are targeting girls, normalizing violence, and fuelling extremist ideologies.
  • And now, an 80% cut to WAGE’s budget threatens to gut the very sector working to hold the line.
  1. BC organizations highlighted our unique realities:
  • The province’s femicide crisis is deepening, with women and girls killed in Abbotsford, Kelowna, Richmond, Surrey, Vancouver and beyond.
  • Extractive projects in northern and rural BC make this province a frontline for resource-linked violence against Indigenous women and girls.
  • Housing costs and shortages in BC are among the worst in Canada, child care are the highest in Canada, both intensifying the dangers survivors face.

Three Core Asks

Together, we called on Minister Valdez to advance three urgent priorities:

  1. Stable, core, sufficient multi-year funding for the gender justice and anti-violence sector, ending the cycle of project-based precarity.
  2. Shifting federal investment toward the care economy, child care, housing, and prevention — recognizing that these are violence prevention measures as essential as policing or infrastructure.
  3. Independent, Indigenous- and survivor-led accountability for the National Action Plan on Gender-Based Violence and the MMIWG Calls for Justice, ensuring promises do not remain words on paper.

The BC Difference

BC organizations highlighted our unique realities:

  • The province’s femicide crisis is deepening, with women and girls killed in Abbotsford, Kelowna, Richmond, Surrey, Vancouver and beyond.
  • Extractive projects in northern and rural BC make this province a frontline for resource-linked violence against Indigenous women and girls.
  • Housing and child care costs and shortages in BC are among the worst in Canada, intensifying the dangers survivors face.

Our Commitment

Organizations across BC are committed to working with Minister Valdez and WAGE, but we will also hold the federal government accountable. Our work is not optional — equality organizations are the backbone of public safety, economic participation, and democracy in Canada.

Quotes:

“Child care in BC is the most expensive in Canada and there’s only enough licensed child care for 25% of children in our province. Women with children fleeing violence need access to $10aDay child care where educators are valued and fairly compensated.”– Sharon Gregson, Coalition of Child Care Advocates of BC and $10 a Day Child Care

One in three women in B.C. have experienced sexual assault and this is unacceptable. – Laurie Hannah, Westcoast Community Resources Society

“The heaviest consequences are disproportionately carried by racialized and Immigrant women” – Nataizya Mukwavi, Black Women Connect Vancouver and Pacific Immigrant Resources Society

“There can be no meaningful access for justice for women and gender-diverse people without the advocacy and support services provided by our sector. – Shannon Daub, West Coast LEAF

“Women and children cannot survive another era of austerity.” – Jennifer Mackie, Fraser Region Aboriginal Friendship Centre Association

“The creation of safe and affordable housing is a key lever for addressing women’s safety and investments are necessary because the home can be one of the most dangerous places.” – Amy Fitzgerald, BC Society of Transition Houses

“Women, girls and gender diverse folks in the north need and deserve safety.” Lynnelle Halikowski, Prince George Sexual Assault Centre

“Every six days a woman in Canada is killed by her partner. In British Columbia, we are losing women and girls at an alarming rate, yet the federal government has not committed to the National Action Plan on Gender-based Violence past year five. Today, we are telling the Minister clearly: gender equality is not optional. Without safety for women, girls, and gender-diverse people, there is no public safety in this country.” – Angela Marie MacDougall, BWSS Battered Women’s Support Services Association

Attendees
  • Amy FitzGerald – BC Society of Transition Houses
  • Nataizya Mukwavi – Black Women Connect Vancouver and Pacific Immigrant Resources Society
  • Angela Marie MacDougall – BWSS Battered Women’s Support Services
  • Sharon Gregson – Coalition of Childcare Advocates of BC $10 a Day Child Care
  • Alice Kendall – Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre
  • Ninu Kang – Ending Violence Association of BC
  • Jennifer Mackie – Fraser Region Aboriginal Friendship Centre Association
  • Sue Brown – Justice for Girls
  • Lisa Schmidt – ‘Ksan Society
  • Lynnell Halikowski – Prince George Sexual Assault Centre
  • Shahnaz Rahman – Surrey Women’s Centre
  • Shannon Daub – West Coast LEAF

A Diagnosis Isn’t Needed to Name Abuse

When describing an abusive partner, it’s common to hear terms like “narcissist,” “psychopath,” or “sociopath” thrown around. These labels may seem to offer clarity, but they often serve to individualize harm, relying on medicalized frameworks that distract from the patterns of power and control at the heart of gender-based violence.

In reality, no diagnosis is required to understand abuse. Abusive partners are not dangerous because they have a personality disorder. They are dangerous because they choose to use tactics—manipulation, isolation, intimidation, humiliation, threats, and violence—to dominate and control others. These behaviours are not accidental. They are intentional, calculated, and often repeated over time with escalating harm.

Many public-facing articles attempt to distinguish between narcissism, psychopathy, and sociopathy. For example, they may describe narcissists as entitled and lacking empathy but still capable of shame; psychopaths as emotionally cold and lacking remorse; and sociopaths as shaped by environmental trauma. But these distinctions risk obscuring the fact that abusive behaviour does not require a clinical diagnosis. People who use violence can present as charming, remorseful, or emotionally intelligent—and still be dangerous.

It’s also important to consider that psychiatric labels have historically been used to excuse or explain abusive behaviour, especially when the abuser is male. Conversely, survivors—especially women—are often pathologized for their trauma responses. This double standard reinforces stigma, removes accountability from perpetrators, and undermines survivors’ credibility.

Instead of focusing on diagnostic categories, we can ask different questions:

  • Does this person repeatedly ignore boundaries?
  • Do they blame others for their actions?
  • Do they isolate or control their partner?
  • Do they escalate in response to accountability?

A trauma- and violence-informed approach does not require diagnostic confirmation to believe survivors, recognize harm, or intervene. It centers survivors’ experiences and shifts the focus from “what is wrong with him?” to “what is he doing—and why is he allowed to keep doing it?”

Understanding abuse requires looking beyond psychology and into systems of power—patriarchy, racism, capitalism, and colonialism—that enable and excuse violence. While clinical tools can offer insight, they should never replace political, social, and survivor-informed analysis of abuse.

If someone’s behaviour is causing fear, harm, or control—those are the receipts. You do not need a label to take it seriously or to take action.

Fawning: The Gendered Survival Strategy Courts Refuse to See

Every survivor of violence knows what it means to calculate risk in an instant. Sometimes survival looks like running, sometimes like fighting back. But often it looks like compliance — a smile to defuse anger, a “yes” to avoid worse harm. This is fawning, and it is as much a trauma response as fighting, freezing or fleeing. Yet in courtrooms across Canada, it is misunderstood as consent, leaving survivors unprotected and
unheard.

Fawning is not a sign of weakness. It is a survival strategy that develops under conditions of coercion, threat, and control. The survivor aligns themselves with the demands of the one in power most often the abusive party, not out of desire but out of necessity. In many cases, it is the only way to stay alive in a moment where resistance could trigger further violence including lethal violence. Despite this reality, the justice system has no framework to interpret fawning. Instead, compliance is misread as willingness. In a country where sexual assault is rarely prosecuted and convictions are rarer still, this gap has devastating consequences.

From an early age, women and girls are conditioned under patriarchy to anticipate male anger and to minimize it. They are taught to smile, to smooth over tension, to soothe men’s emotions in order to avoid punishment. These lessons are reinforced in families, schools, workplaces, and intimate relationships, where power is unequally distributed and male authority often goes unquestioned. What is framed as “female politeness” is in fact a set of survival behaviours under male dominance. Fawning is not only an individual trauma response but also a reflection of systemic gender inequality that normalizes women’s submission to men’s demands.

This conditioning is so deeply normalized that when it surfaces in sexual assault cases, courts interpret it as proof of consent. Judges, prosecutors, and defence lawyers work within a legal framework built on patriarchal notions of sexuality, where men’s pursuit is assumed and women’s resistance is demanded in order for “no” to be taken seriously. The result is that survival strategies like placating, freezing, or silence are weaponized against survivors, reinforcing male power in the courtroom just as it operates in the home or on the street. The law’s blindness is not neutral rather it actively protects perpetrators while punishing women for doing what they had to do to survive.

Recent high-profile cases in Canada illustrate this clearly. In acquitting five former members of Canada’s world junior hockey team on sexual assault charges, the court dismissed the survivor’s fear as irrelevant.

The defence argued that there is “no consent-vitiating level of fear,” suggesting that unless a woman actively resisted, the law must see her actions as agreement. This interpretation reflects a patriarchal logic that centres men’s desires and dismisses women’s realities. It also reveals the structural power imbalance in play: young men backed by institutions of sport and law are granted credibility, while a woman’s fear and survival strategies are erased.

The consequences extend far beyond any one trial. In family court for instance, survivors are discouraged from disclosing intimate partner violence because their trauma responses will be turned against them.

Perpetrators learn that compliance under pressure can be twisted into a shield against accountability. Families are left to grieve in the aftermath of preventable violence. All of this occurs within a justice system designed to preserve male authority rather than challenge it. What is at stake is not only the failure to prosecute individual cases, but the broader normalization of male violence as a tolerated feature of society.

A survivor-centred system would centre something different. It would recognize that strategies that women…and girls deploy for survival cannot be divorced from the unequal power relations that shape them. It would take seriously the ways patriarchy constrains women’s choices and forces compliance as a means of staying alive. It would require police, prosecutors, and judges to see fawning not as consent but as evidence of coercion, fear, and structural inequality. To do otherwise is to continue siding with male power at the expense of women’s safety.

The stakes are not abstract – based on numbers from 2019 gender-based violence is escalating across Canada while femicides have also increased. Service providers like ours are witnessing unprecedented numbers of women, girls and gender-diverse people reaching out for help. In this context, the refusal to recognize fawning is not simply a technical legal flaw. It is part of a larger pattern in which institutions uphold patriarchal dominance by denying the full reality of violence, leaving survivors to carry the consequences alone.

Survivors should not be penalized for the ways they manage to stay alive, because compliance under duress is not consent and silence in the face of threat is not agreement. Fawning is a survival strategy born out of fear and enforced by patriarchy, and until our justice system acknowledges this truth, it will continue to deny justice.

We call on legislators, prosecutors, and judges to engage with this reality, to confront the failure of the current legal framework, and to take responsibility for reform.

Survivors cannot afford another decade of neglect. The time to change the way our courts see survival is now.

Podcast Feature: Reframing Gender-Based Violence as a Public Safety Crisis

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Illustration: Shawn Parkinson / The Narwhal<br />

In the wake of multiple femicides and a growing public reckoning with systemic failures in BC’s response to intimate partner violence, Hotel Pacifico invited BWSS Executive Director Angela Marie MacDougall for a full-length interview on the escalating crisis of gender-based violence and the political inaction that sustains it.

The conversation aired just weeks after five women were killed in British Columbia within a single month, including in Kelowna, where state systems had been actively engaged but failed to prevent the outcome. What emerged from the interview was not simply commentary on tragic events, but a rare and unflinching public analysis of the social, legal, cultural, and institutional conditions that allow violence to persist.

Angela brought a survivor-centred, systemic lens to the table, challenging the “random tragedy” framing that too often dominates news coverage, and instead calling out state responsibility, political inertia, and the refusal to implement known, evidence-based solutions. From lethality risk assessments to the urgent need for mayors and councils to name this issue publicly, she laid out a clear and actionable path for change.

This episode marked one of the most strategic and impactful public discussions on GBV in BC to date. It came at a critical moment when public frustration is rising, the media is beginning to connect the dots, and policymakers can no longer justify delay.

We invite you to listen and read our full analysis of the interview’s key strengths, missed opportunities, and implications for government, media, and public safety systems.

Listen to the episode here: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/hotel-pacifico/id1712174560?i=1000721099609

When the Heat Rises, So Does the Violence: Climate Change and Gender-Based Violence in Canada

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Illustration: Shawn Parkinson / The Narwhal<br />

As temperatures rise across Canada, so too does the risk to women, girls, and gender-diverse people living with violence. This isn’t speculation—it’s a well-documented and increasingly urgent reality. A recent feature in The Narwhal (August 2025), titled “As temperatures spike, so do reports of domestic violence in Canada,”  (hyperlink) makes a timely intervention by connecting climate change with gender-based violence (GBV). It’s a link that has long been ignored in Canadian policy but one that frontline workers have seen for years.

The article highlights how climate stress, especially extreme heat, is not just an environmental or infrastructure issue. It is a public safety crisis, with real consequences for survivors of intimate partner violence, especially those already marginalized by poverty, racism, or housing insecurity.

BWSS was one of the organizations interviewed for the article, and we welcome the opportunity to build on its insights. But we also see space for a deeper and more systemic analysis, one that names misogyny and patriarchy as the root causes of violence and recognizes the climate crisis not only as an ecological disaster, but as a gendered one.

Below, we offer a critical reflection on the article and explore how climate change intensifies the structural conditions that allow gender-based violence to thrive.

Strengths of the Article

Timely and Intersectional Framing

The Narwhal’s piece does important work by bridging two urgent crises, climate change and intimate partner violence and naming the connection between them as both a public safety and a public health issue. This framing helps move the conversation beyond individual “incidents” toward understanding GBV as part of a larger social and political pattern, one that is being exacerbated by environmental collapse.

By doing so, the article joins a growing movement of scholars, advocates, and survivors who understand that gender-based violence is not separate from climate change, economic inequality, or colonial displacement. These crises are interlocking and so must be our solutions.

Data-Backed Storytelling

One of the strengths of the article is its blend of statistical data with stories from the front lines. National trends showing seasonal spikes in domestic violence are paired with insights from shelters like SOFIA House and BWSS, grounding the findings in lived experience. This combination makes the issue legible both to policymakers and to the broader public.

Importantly, the article does not rely on vague notions of “tension” or “conflict.” Instead, it links heatwaves to real-world outcomes: increased calls for help, greater control by abusers, and rising femicides. This clarity matters.

Intersectional Awareness of Vulnerability

The article makes clear that heat does not affect everyone equally. Women living in unsafe housing, without air conditioning or financial autonomy, are especially vulnerable. Survivors who face multiple forms of oppression—Indigenous women, Black and racialized women, women with precarious immigration status—face greater risks and fewer options.

This is not just a story about heat. It’s a story about power: about who holds it, who abuses it, and how our systems repeatedly fail to intervene.

Areas for Deepening

While the article is a welcome contribution, there are critical dimensions that deserve more attention—especially if we are to meaningfully act on what it reveals.

From Correlation to Causality

The article notes the statistical correlation between rising temperatures and domestic violence but stops short of interrogating the deeper mechanisms. Does heat biologically increase aggression? Or is it simply the trigger that activates violence already embedded in patriarchal systems?

From a feminist perspective, we must be cautious not to suggest that heat causes abuse. Misogyny and patriarchy are root causes. What heat does is intensify existing risk factors: economic pressure, emotional volatility, housing stress, and the entitlements bred by misogyny. When an abuser feels loss of control whether because of finances, climate stress, or ego it is women and children who pay the price. Climate is not the cause of violence. Patriarchy is.

Regional and Structural Specificity

The article gestures to differences across provinces, but a deeper analysis of BC, for example, would have been instructive. In BC, we’ve seen fatal outcomes in urban centres like Kelowna, but also in rural areas where services are virtually inaccessible. Northern regions face both extreme weather and a lack of safe housing, police accountability, or Indigenous-led response systems.

The same heatwave in Vancouver looks very different in Bella Coola, Prince George, or Fort St. John. Yet too often, public policy treats GBV and climate as “urban” problems, ignoring regional inequities in infrastructure, funding, and political attention.

Constraints on Frontline Services

BWSS and others were consulted for the article, but the piece could have gone further in naming how underfunding, fragmented planning, and systemic neglect limit our ability to respond to heat-related violence. Some shelters do not have air conditioning. Others cannot relocate survivors during wildfires. Mobile units often lack staff and funding. And the core funding we rely on has not been adjusted to reflect new climate realities.

Emergency management frameworks rarely consider survivors’ needs in evacuation plans or cooling centre design. This is not just an oversight—it is a political choice that reflects how gender-based violence continues to be treated as secondary, even in a crisis.

Naming the Root: Misogyny and Patriarchy

What’s missing from most mainstream analyses—including this one is an explicit naming of the cultural and institutional conditions that allow violence to flourish in the first place. At its core, intimate partner violence is not about heat. It is about male entitlement. It is about the belief that women are property. It is about the systems, legal, economic, social, that reinforce and excuse that belief.

The climate crisis doesn’t invent those dynamics. It magnifies them. It isolates survivors, increases financial strain, disrupts support systems, and gives abusers more power. And in a country where the majority of survivors never report to police, and where only a fraction of cases are prosecuted, the message remains clear: violence against women is tolerated.

If we want to end that tolerance, we must confront the whole system and not just its symptoms.

Climate Crisis as a Product of Patriarchy and Colonialism

The climate crisis is not a natural disaster, it is a man-made one, driven by centuries of extractive capitalism, colonial land theft, and patriarchal domination. The same logic that treats women’s lives as disposable treats ecosystems as expendable. Corporations profit while communities are displaced, just as abusers maintain control while systems look the other way. Fossil fuel expansion, unsustainable development, and the criminalization of land and water defenders many of them Indigenous women are not separate from gender-based violence. They are parallel expressions of the same violent systems. To confront one without the other is to miss the full picture of harm and the full scope of resistance.

What Needs to Change – Urgent Actions

  • Risk Assessment Must Be Mandated
    Governments must require risk assessments across all sectors—police, Crown, MCFD, shelters—so that heat, housing, and coercive control are understood as part of a larger pattern of escalating risk.
  • Disaster Planning Must Centre Survivors
    Emergency response systems must include gender-based violence protocols, including safe shelter options during evacuations and public alerts that do not endanger women trying to flee.
  • Frontline Services Must Be Climate-Resilient
    That means cooling infrastructure, flexible emergency funding, mobile outreach, and staffing plans that recognize the dual impact of violence and environmental strain.
  • Housing and Utility Policy Must Be Survivor-Centred
    Survivors need access to affordable housing that can withstand heatwaves and wildfires—and protection from abusers who use utility bills and housing insecurity as tools of control.

The Narwhal has opened the door to a necessary conversation. It’s now up to policymakers, funders, and all levels of government to walk through it and to recognize that public safety, climate justice, and gender justice are inseparable.

When the heat rises, it reveals the cracks in our systems. But the root cause is not the weather. It’s the violence that patriarchy makes possible—and the political will to look away.

It’s time we stopped looking away.

Read – As temperatures spike, so do reports of domestic violence in Canada 

Survivor-Centred Safety – Where Do BC Cities Stand?

Across British Columbia, BWSS has called on every Mayor and Council to take action on gender-based violence—because public safety must be designed with survivors in mind. This tracker reflects where each municipality stands: who’s met with us, who’s committed to action, and who we’re still waiting to hear from.

This isn’t about blame, however it is about accountability—and building a province where no woman’s safety depends on her postal code.

Met with BWSS
🟡 Committed to action or next steps
No response yet

We update this tracker regularly as municipalities engage. If your city isn’t on the map yet, ask your local leaders: Where do you stand?

City

 

BWSS Meeting

 

Action Taken

Comments

100 Mile House No response yet

 

 

Abbotsford Met with BWSS    
Alert Bay No response yet    
Anmore No response yet    
Armstrong No response yet    
Ascroft No response yet    
Asha DeLisle No response yet    
Barriere No response yet    
Belcarra No response yet    
Bowen Island No response yet    
Burnaby Met with BWSS    
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Cache Creek No response yet    
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Canal Flats No response yet    
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Colwood No response yet    
Comox     🟡 Replied but no meeting scheduled
Coquitlam No response yet    
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Cranbrook No response yet    
Creston Met with BWSS    
Cumberland     🟡 Awaiting meeting dates
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Kelowna Met with BWSS    
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Keremeos Met with BWSS    
Kimberley  ❌ No response yet    
Kitimat     🟡 awaiting meeting dates
Ladysmith No response yet    
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Langley 🟡 Meeting scheduled for September    
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New Westminster
    🟡 Awaiting meeting dates
North Cowichan     ❌ Council replied and are not pursuing a meeting
North Saanich No response yet    
North Vancouver Met with BWSS    
Northern Rockies
No response yet    
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Oliver No response yet    
Osoyoos No response yet    
Parksville No response yet    
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Pitt Meadows     🟡 Awaiting meeting dates
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Prince George     🟡  Awaiting meeting dates
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Princeton No response yet    
Qualicum Beach No response yet    
Quesnel No response yet    
Radium Hot Springs
No response yet    
Revelstoke No response yet    
Richmond Met with BWSS    
Rossland No response yet    
Royal View No response yet    
Saanich Met with BWSS    
Salmo No response yet    
Salmon Arm No response yet    
Sayward No response yet    
Schelt No response yet    
shíshálh Nation No response yet    
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Sun Peaks Mountain
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Surrey Met with BWSS    
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Trail 🟡 Meeting scheduled for September    
Tumbler Ridge     🟡 Meeting in October
Ucluelet 🟡 Meeting scheduled for September    
Valemount No response yet    
Vancouver Met with BWSS    
Vanderhoof No response yet    
Vernon No response yet    
Victoria No response yet    
Warfield No response yet    
Wells No response yet    
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