A Turning Point for Survivor Safety in British Columbia
This week, Canadians witnessed two significant developments in the effort to address gender-based violence. The federal government announced proposed changes to the Criminal Code that move toward naming violence against women more accurately and more honestly. Legislative reform is important, but for us at Battered Women’s Support Services the most consequential news came from British Columbia.
On the same day as the federal announcement, British Columbia’s Attorney General confirmed that one of the Province’s top priorities in responding to the Stanton Report will be the creation and implementation of standardized screening, risk assessment and safety planning across both the criminal and family law systems. This commitment represents a long overdue recognition that the way institutions identify and respond to risk often determines whether a woman lives or dies.
Women in British Columbia have been killed after their risk was overlooked or downgraded. Others were killed even when formal tools were used but the results were not acted upon. These deaths were not unpredictable. They were preventable. When risk assessment is inconsistent, delayed or left to individual discretion, danger escalates unchecked. When systems fail to communicate, survivors fall through the gaps that institutions created.
This announcement from the Attorney General is a response to a femicide emergency that has become impossible to ignore. It is also one of BWSS’s Five Asks. We have repeatedly called for mandatory, standardized risk assessment across all systems. We know from decades of work that risk assessment is one of the few evidence-based tools that can reliably flag escalating danger. It gives police a clearer picture. It informs Crown decision making. It helps judges understand the level of threat women and children face. It guides safety planning and ensures that family court processes do not undermine survivor safety.
The commitment from the Province is a significant step, but its impact will depend entirely on implementation. Standardization means every case is screened. It means the same indicators of danger are recognized across police, Crown, courts and child protection. It means tools are updated to reflect what we know about coercive control, separation risk, strangulation, threats to children and systems abuse. It means that when high risk is identified, every actor involved understands what must happen next.
It is important to acknowledge how we arrived at this moment. Survivors have been naming their experiences for years. Families have spoken out after tragedies. Advocates across the province have insisted that risk assessment can no longer be optional. Researchers such as Dr Kim Stanton have laid out the systemic failures in detail. This announcement would not have happened without that sustained and often exhausting work.
The Province has taken a step that has the potential to save lives. It will only matter if it is carried out with urgency, consistency and courage. Every day without full implementation is a day when women remain at risk. Standardized risk assessment must become a foundation of public safety in British Columbia.
Over the coming days we will share more about what risk assessment is, why it matters, how it prevents femicide and what effective implementation looks like. We will outline how this commitment fits within BWSS’s Five Asks for a safer British Columbia. Most importantly, we will continue to centre the women who should still be here. Their lives guide our work. Their absence reminds us why this commitment must be fulfilled.
Our Five Asks:
- Mandatory, standardized risk assessment across all systems including police, Crown, courts, MCFD and family law so that danger is identified and acted on consistently.
- Municipal GBV Task Forces in every community to ensure local governments treat gender-based violence as a core public safety responsibility.
- Stabilized core funding for frontline anti-violence services so survivors can access crisis response, legal advocacy, housing support and counselling without delays or gaps.
- A long term provincial GBV prevention campaign to increase public understanding of coercive control, strangulation, stalking, digital violence and other indicators of risk.
- A dedicated GBV lead within Public Safety and Attorney General offices with responsibility for coordinating system change, ensuring oversight and monitoring implementation across ministries.




