Firearms, Intimate Partner Violence, and What This New Statistics Canada Report Means for Women’s Safety

Firearms, Intimate Partner Violence, and What This New Statistics Canada Report Means for Women’s Safety

Rates of gun-related intimate partner violence rising: StatsCan Tara Carman · CBC News

On July 8, 2026, Statistics Canada released Firearms and Intimate Partner Violence in Canada, 2009 to 2024, the first national analysis focused specifically on the intersection of firearms and intimate partner violence (IPV). While much of the public discussion will likely focus on gun violence, the report tells a much broader story. 

Read through the lens of women’s safety, it is a report about risk, coercive control, separation, femicide, and the urgent need for earlier intervention. For nearly five decades, BWSS has worked alongside women experiencing intimate partner violence. Much of what this report documents statistically reflects what survivors have been telling us for years.

Key Findings at a Glance

  • Firearm-related IPV rates have risen 58% since the early 2010s
  • More than half of victims are harmed by dating partners — a historic shift
  • 41% of firearm IPV involves former partners — separation is the highest-risk period
  • Women aged 18–24 face the highest rates; girls 12–17 experience rates 16× higher than boys
  • 57% of victims had no physical injury — firearms are weapons of terror and control
  • 91% of firearm-related IPV homicide victims were women and girls
  • In more than half of firearm IPV homicides, the accused subsequently died by suicide

The Most Important Finding Isn’t About Guns Instead it is About Escalating Risk

The headline statistic is that there were 1,096 victims of police-reported firearm-related intimate partner violence in 2024. While significant, that number alone does not capture the real story. The report shows that the rate of firearm-related IPV has increased by 58% compared to the early 2010s, rising much faster than intimate partner violence overall. Since 2020, firearm-related IPV has remained consistently higher than in previous decades, suggesting that while firearms remain involved in a relatively small proportion of all IPV incidents, they are becoming an increasingly significant marker of severe violence and lethality.

58%
Increase in firearm-related IPV rate since the early 2010s
1,096
Victims of police-reported firearm IPV in 2024 alone
2020+
Firearm IPV has remained consistently elevated since 2020

For BWSS, this reinforces an essential principle of our work: public safety cannot be measured solely by counting incidents. We must also measure severity and lethality. Firearms transform already dangerous situations into circumstances where the risk of homicide increases dramatically. Systems designed to prevent violence need to identify escalating risk long before a firearm is discharged.

Dating Relationships Are Becoming the New Front Line

One of the report’s most striking findings is the changing nature of firearm-related intimate partner violence. Historically, most firearm-related IPV occurred within marriages or common-law relationships. Today, more than half of victims are harmed by current or former dating partners. This represents a significant shift toward younger relationships and earlier stages of intimate partnerships.

This finding has profound implications for prevention. It means firearm-related coercive control and violence are no longer issues confined primarily to long-term relationships. Schools, universities, youth-serving organizations, and communities must recognize that serious intimate partner violence, including firearm threats, can occur in dating relationships long before couples marry or live together. Prevention efforts must evolve accordingly.

Separation Remains One of the Most Dangerous Times

The report reinforces decades of research and frontline experience demonstrating that separation is one of the highest-risk periods for women experiencing intimate partner violence. Forty-one percent of firearm-related IPV involved former partners, a substantially higher proportion than incidents involving other weapons or physical force alone.

At BWSS, we have long emphasized that leaving an abusive partner does not necessarily end the violence. In many cases, it escalates it. Safety planning during separation must remain central to policing, family law, child protection, and community response. Systems that assume women become safer simply because they have left misunderstand the dynamics of coercive control and can inadvertently increase risk.

Young Women Face the Highest Rates of Firearm-Related IPV

18–24
Age group with the highest rates of firearm-related IPV
16×
Girls 12–17 experience firearm-related IPV at rates sixteen times higher than boys

Among all age groups, women aged 18 to 24 experience the highest rates of firearm-related intimate partner violence. Even more concerning, girls aged 12 to 17 experience firearm-related IPV at rates sixteen times higher than boys of the same age.

These findings highlight the urgent need for prevention efforts that begin well before adulthood. Healthy relationship education, coercive control awareness, early intervention, and youth-focused support services must become core public safety strategies. Young women are disproportionately carrying the burden of firearm-related intimate partner violence, and prevention systems need to respond accordingly.

Firearm IPV Is Never Just Between Two People

One of the report’s lesser-known but extremely important findings is that firearm-related IPV frequently affects multiple victims. More than one in five firearm-related incidents involved additional victims beyond the intimate partner, including children, family members, acquaintances, and strangers. This occurred at three times the rate seen in other forms of intimate partner violence.

This finding challenges the persistent myth that intimate partner violence is a private matter confined to the home. Firearm-related IPV regularly spills beyond the relationship itself, placing entire families and communities at risk. Public safety does not begin when violence reaches public spaces—it begins by addressing violence inside the home before others become victims.

Geography Matters

The report finds that firearm-related intimate partner violence occurs at rates nearly three times higher in rural communities than in major urban centres. Northern and rural regions continue to experience the highest rates nationally.

This reflects more than geography. Rural communities often face longer police response times, fewer shelters, limited access to legal services, and greater firearm availability. Women living outside major cities should not face greater danger simply because of where they live. Effective public safety requires equitable investment in rural services, transportation, housing, and crisis response.

The Nature of Firearm Violence Is Changing

For years, rifles and shotguns were the firearms most commonly involved in intimate partner violence. Since 2020, however, handguns have become the most common firearm present in non-fatal firearm-related IPV incidents. Yet rifles and shotguns continue to account for most firearm-related intimate partner homicides.

This changing pattern suggests that firearm-related intimate partner violence is evolving. Understanding which firearms are involved—and in what circumstances—is important not only for firearm policy but also for risk assessment, policing, and prevention. Different forms of firearm access may require different intervention strategies.


The Presence of a Firearm Is Violence

57%
of firearm-related IPV victims sustained no physical injury

One of the report’s most powerful findings is that 57% of firearm-related IPV victims sustained no physical injury. Some readers may mistakenly conclude that firearms therefore played a limited role. The report makes clear that this would be the wrong conclusion. Firearms are frequently used to threaten, intimidate, control, and terrorize victims without being discharged. The psychological consequences can be profound, including heightened fear and increased symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder.

This finding aligns directly with BWSS’s understanding of coercive control. Violence cannot be measured solely by visible injuries. A firearm displayed during an argument, pointed without firing, or used as an implied threat fundamentally changes the power dynamics of the relationship. The absence of physical injury does not mean the absence of violence.

Violence Rarely Comes Without Warning

The report also finds that more than half of those accused of firearm-related intimate partner violence had previously been accused of violent crime, while over one-third had previous police contact involving intimate partner violence itself.

This reinforces a reality that BWSS encounters daily: severe violence often develops through a series of escalating warning signs rather than isolated events. Previous violence, stalking, coercive control, breaches of court orders, and repeated police contacts should all trigger meaningful risk assessment and intervention. Public safety depends on recognizing patterns, not simply responding to individual incidents.

Firearm Intimate Partner Violence Is a Femicide Issue

294
People killed in firearm-related IPV homicides in Canada, 2009–2024
91%
of those killed were women and girls
1 in 5
Intimate partner homicides during this period involved shooting

Between 2009 and 2024, 294 people were killed in firearm-related intimate partner homicides in Canada. Ninety-one percent of those killed were women and girls. One in every five intimate partner homicides during this period involved shooting.

These numbers leave little doubt that firearm-related intimate partner violence is fundamentally a women’s safety issue. While firearm violence often receives attention through discussions of gangs or organized crime, this report demonstrates that women continue to face disproportionate risk within intimate relationships. Preventing femicide requires addressing intimate partner violence as a core public safety priority.

Murder-Suicide Demands Greater Attention

Perhaps the most sobering statistic in the report is that in more than half of firearm-related intimate partner homicides, the accused person subsequently died by suicide. This proportion is dramatically higher than for intimate partner homicides involving other methods.

These incidents are often described as isolated tragedies, but they follow recognizable patterns of coercive control, escalating violence, and access to firearms. Preventing homicide means identifying risk before a crisis unfolds. Firearm removal, coordinated information sharing, and evidence-based risk assessment are essential public safety tools.

What Systems Don’t Know Can Still Kill

The report notes that police were aware of a history of violence in only 44% of firearm-related intimate partner homicides. Importantly, the authors caution against interpreting this to mean that violence did not exist. Much intimate partner violence—including coercive control—is never reported to police and therefore remains invisible within official records.

For BWSS, this finding reinforces the importance of listening to survivors rather than relying solely on criminal justice records. Systems frequently underestimate danger because coercive control, psychological abuse, and escalating threats often remain hidden until it is too late. Absence of documentation should never be mistaken for absence of risk.

The Questions We Still Need Answered

While this report provides valuable national data, it also reveals important gaps. It cannot tell us how many firearm-related cases involved completed risk assessments, how often firearms were seized and later returned, whether Family Law Act protection orders were enforced, or whether information was effectively shared between police, Crown, and family courts. It cannot tell us how many homicides might have been prevented had earlier interventions occurred.

These are precisely the questions BWSS believes Canada must now answer. Data should not simply describe violence after it occurs. It should help systems prevent it.

This report confirms what survivors and frontline organizations have known for years: firearm-related intimate partner violence is predictable, identifiable, and, in many cases, preventable. The challenge now is ensuring that public systems act on the warning signs before another woman is killed.

BWSS Public Legal Education Series

BWSS Public Legal Education Series

Practical legal information for survivors of intimate partner violence and those who support them.

The BWSS Public Legal Education Series is a free monthly webinar series designed to help survivors, community support workers, legal advocates, and others better understand family law, legal rights, and options for increasing safety.

Each workshop is led by experienced family law lawyers and legal professionals who provide practical, survivor-centred legal information in plain language.

Whether you are navigating the legal system yourself or supporting someone who is, these workshops will help you better understand legal processes, common challenges, and available resources.

All workshops are free, held online via Zoom, and take place at 12:00 PM.

Who Should Attend?

Survivors of intimate partner violence

Community support workers

Legal advocates

Transition house workers

Counsellors & settlement workers

Victim service workers

Students

Lawyers and legal professionals

Anyone supporting women experiencing IPV

Workshop Format

One hour online via Zoom at 12:00 PM

~40 minutes of presentation

20 minutes of moderated Q&A

Submit questions in advance

Presentation recording provided

Q&A not recorded (to protect participant privacy)

Monthly Legal Update included

2026–2027 Workshop Schedule

Jul
23
2026
12:00 PM

Child Protection and Working with MCFD

Understanding child protection investigations, safety plans, court orders, and your rights during the child protection process.

Maddison Tebbutt — JML

Aug
27
2026
12:00 PM

Protection Orders and Immediate Safety

Understanding Family Law Protection Orders, peace bonds, exclusive occupancy orders, and common questions about immediate safety.

Bahareh Danaei — North Shore Law

Sep
24
2026
12:00 PM

Children’s Views and Parenting Issues

What happens when children do not want to attend parenting time, managing exchanges safely, and understanding children’s views.

Michael Zimmerman — LK Law

Oct
22
2026
12:00 PM

Child and Spousal Support

Understanding support obligations, self-employment income, financial disclosure, and imputing income.

Kate Lawrence — JML

Nov
26
2026
12:00 PM

Family Property and Debt

Understanding family property, excluded property, family debt, and interim financial applications.

Kate Lawrence — JML

Jan
28
2027
12:00 PM

Pensions and Financial Security

An introduction to pensions after separation, protecting future financial interests, and available resources.

Kate Lawrence — JML & Guest TBC

Feb
25
2027
12:00 PM

Working with a Lawyer

What to expect from your lawyer, understanding legal bills, preparing for meetings, and advocating for yourself.

Kate Lawrence — JML

Mar
25
2027
12:00 PM

Preparing for Mediation

How to prepare effectively, safety considerations, shuttle mediation, and understanding the mediation process.

Kate Lawrence — Guest TBC

Apr
22
2027
12:00 PM

Trial Preparation and Evidence

Preparing documents, organizing evidence, understanding disclosure, and preparing for court.

Kate Lawrence — JML

Monthly Legal Update

  • Summary of key legal information from each workshop
  • Practical reminders and plain-language legal glossary
  • Helpful resources and links
  • Information about the next upcoming workshop
  • Opportunity to submit questions for future sessions

Questions?

Questions may be submitted before each workshop through our online Question Submission Form.

Questions will be reviewed by BWSS staff and shared anonymously with presenters where appropriate.

To help protect participant privacy, only the presentation portion of each workshop will be recorded.

Registration

Online Legal Workshop Registration

Workshop Registration

Name(Required)
Which workshop(s) would you like to attend?(Required)
Would you like to receive future updates?
The information collected through this registration form will be used only to administer the BWSS Public Legal Education Series, provide workshop information, distribute related educational resources, and communicate with participants about this series. Your information will not be shared outside BWSS without your consent unless required by law.

Question Submission

Question Submission

Name
All questions are reviewed by BWSS staff and shared anonymously with presenters. You are not required to provide your name or email.

Statement on the Conviction in the Femicide of Tatjana Stefanski

Photo curtesy of Justice for Tatjana Facebook

Photo curtesy of Justice for Tatjana Facebook

Today, a B.C. Supreme Court jury found Vitali Stefanski guilty of second-degree murder in the killing of Tatjana Stefanski. The verdict follows a five-week trial in Kamloops and marks an important moment of accountability for Tatjana’s family, loved ones, and community. 

Our thoughts are with Tatjana’s children, family, friends, and everyone whose lives have been forever changed by her death. 

The verdict matters. But it is not the beginning of accountability. It is the end of a long chain of missed opportunities. Criminal convictions are accountability after death. Our responsibility must be accountability before death. 

Intimate partner violence rarely begins with homicide. Femicide is almost never the first act of violence. It is most often the final act of coercive control, intimidation, isolation, threats, stalking, and escalating abuse. The question is not whether there were warning signs. The question is who saw them, who understood them, and whether our systems responded. 

This is the downplay effect. Violence escalates, but before it escalates, it is downplayed. It is minimized. It is normalized. It is explained away. It is dismissed as a relationship problem. It is treated as a private matter instead of a public safety issue. 

When coercive control is misunderstood or ignored, opportunities to intervene are lost. By the time the criminal justice system responds to homicide, every other system has already failed. 

This case also highlights the heightened risks facing women in rural communities. Women living in rural British Columbia are disproportionately represented among those killed by current or former intimate partners, a reality reinforced by the BC Coroners Service’s recent death review. 

Canada is beginning to recognize what survivors and advocates have known for decades. Recent federal reforms have strengthened responses to intimate partner violence by recognizing coercive control and repeat intimate partner violence as indicators of elevated risk, strengthening bail provisions for repeat offenders, and acknowledging the unique dangers women face. 

The direction of Parliament is clear: intimate partner violence is increasingly being recognized as a public safety issue, not simply a private family matter. 

But legislation alone cannot prevent violence. Laws operate after violence occurs. Prevention happens in communities, in workplaces, in schools, in healthcare settings, and across the systems that interact with families every day. It happens when coercive control is recognized early, when warning signs are acted upon, and when survivors are believed and supported before violence becomes lethal. 

Today, we remember Tatjana Stefanski. We honour her life, stand with those who loved her, and recommit ourselves to ensuring that accountability begins long before another woman’s name becomes a headline.

Rooted in Community. Contributing Nationally.

Battered Women’s Support Services (BWSS) is proud to be among 34 organizations selected to receive a National Capacity Building Grant administered by the Canadian Women’s Foundation and funded by Women and Gender Equality Canada (WAGE) through a process informed by national women’s rights organizations.

This investment comes at a critical time for organizations working to advance gender equality. Across Canada, women’s rights and gender justice organizations are responding to increasing demand, evolving public policy landscapes, and growing expectations for collaboration and systems leadership, often within funding environments that remain project-based and unpredictable.

For nearly 50 years, BWSS has worked alongside survivors in Vancouver and across British Columbia. Through crisis support, legal advocacy, prevention education, and systems advocacy, we have witnessed firsthand how gender-based violence is shaped by broader social, legal, and economic conditions. The expertise developed through this community-based feminist anti-violence work increasingly informs efforts to advance justice reform, public safety, and gender equality across Canada.

While BWSS remains deeply rooted in community-based anti-violence work in Vancouver and British Columbia, this investment recognizes and strengthens our growing role in national collaboration. Over the coming year, BWSS will enhance the governance, evaluation, strategic planning, and organizational systems that support cross-country partnerships, knowledge exchange, and survivor-informed contributions to efforts advancing justice, public safety, and gender equality across Canada. By strengthening the infrastructure that supports this work, BWSS will be better positioned to contribute to collective learning, foster collaboration across regions, and ensure that insights developed alongside survivors continue to inform systems change at local, provincial, and national levels.

At its heart, this investment is about strengthening feminist infrastructure. Strong movements require strong organizations. Community-based organizations working alongside survivors bring essential expertise to conversations about safety, justice, and equality. Sustaining that expertise requires investment not only in programs and services, but also in the organizational capacity that enables long-term leadership, partnership, and impact.

We are grateful to the Canadian Women’s Foundation for stewarding this process and acknowledge the investment of Women and Gender Equality Canada in strengthening organizations advancing gender equality. We also recognize the organizations that helped shape these investments through the Reference Group, reflecting the importance of collective leadership in building strong feminist movements across Canada.

BWSS is proud to stand alongside communities and organizations across the country working to advance justice, safety, and gender equality. Rooted in community and informed by the experiences of survivors, we remain committed to contributing to the collective work of creating a future where safety, dignity, and equality are realities for everyone.

Safety changes everything.

For more information on the Canadian Women’s Foundation website:

BWSS Appearing Before Senate Committee on Bill C-16

Today, Battered Women’s Support Services (BWSS) is appearing before the Standing Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs as part of its study of Bill C-16, An Act to amend certain Acts in relation to criminal and correctional matters (child protection, gender-based violence, delays and other measures).

For more than 45 years, BWSS has worked alongside women and gender-diverse people experiencing intimate partner violence. Through crisis support, legal advocacy, counselling, prevention education, and systems advocacy, we have seen both the strengths and limitations of Canada’s responses to violence.

This frontline experience informs our participation in the Senate’s review of Bill C-16.

What is Bill C-16?

Bill C-16 proposes significant reforms intended to strengthen Canada’s response to violence, particularly intimate partner violence. The legislation includes measures related to:

Coercive control: Recognizing patterns of behaviour that dominate, isolate, intimidate, and entrap an intimate partner, even where physical violence may not be present.

Femicide: Acknowledging the gendered nature of lethal violence against women and girls.

Criminal harassment: Amending legal responses to stalking and harassment.

Mandatory minimum sentencing: Introducing or expanding certain sentencing provisions.

Child protection and related criminal justice measures: Addressing the impacts of violence on children and families.

BWSS supports the intent of Bill C-16 and welcomes efforts to improve legal recognition of coercive control and femicide. Survivors have long told us that the non-physical forms of abuse that shape their daily lives, including intimidation, isolation, surveillance, and economic control, are often misunderstood or minimized.

Why is BWSS speaking to Bill C-16?

While legal reform is important, our frontline experience demonstrates that legislation alone cannot improve safety.

Survivors have taught us two things simultaneously: they want violence to stop, and they want police and legal systems that help rather than harm.

BWSS is appearing before the Senate to ensure that survivors’ experiences inform the laws intended to protect them. Our submission emphasizes that intimate partner violence is often misunderstood as a series of isolated incidents when, in reality, coercive control operates as a pattern of domination and entrapment that escalates over time.

As we have stated in our submission:

The question is not simply, “What happened?” The question is, “What has been happening over time?”

This distinction is critical to ensuring that systems identify escalating risk and respond appropriately.

Key Issues Raised by BWSS

Protection Must Never Become Punishment

One of BWSS’s primary concerns is that laws intended to protect survivors may inadvertently criminalize them.

Frontline evidence demonstrates that survivors are sometimes misidentified as primary aggressors, particularly when systems rely on incident-based approaches that fail to recognize coercive control. Survivors acting in self-defence, protecting their children, or responding to trauma may themselves become entangled in the criminal legal system.

BWSS is calling for clear safeguards to ensure that survivors are not criminalized for actions taken to preserve their safety and wellbeing.

Femicide Is Preventable

Femicide rarely occurs without warning signs.

Escalating coercive control, separation, stalking, prior threats, and previous system contact often precede lethal violence. BWSS believes that Bill C-16 presents an opportunity to move Canada from reacting to violence after it occurs toward preventing it before it becomes lethal.

As our submission notes:

The tragedy is that too often, it was known then ignored, dismissed or downplayed.

Our intention is to continue advancing effective prevention that are grounded in coordinated responses, risk assessment, and police and legaly systems that act on known lethality risk factors before violence escalates.

Implementation Matters

Experience from other jurisdictions demonstrates that legal recognition alone does not improve safety.

Without appropriate safeguards, training, public education, and investment in community-based supports, reforms risk reinforcing existing gaps and harms. BWSS is calling for mandatory training, standardized approaches to risk assessment, public legal education, and sustained funding for community-based anti-violence services.

Community-based organizations are not ancillary to public safety, they are part of public safety infrastructure.

Survivors’ Experiences Must Inform Law Reform

Bill C-16 represents an important opportunity to strengthen Canada’s response to intimate partner violence. However, the effectiveness of these reforms will ultimately depend on whether they improve safety for survivors and their children.

BWSS is urging Parliament to ensure that legal reforms are accompanied by the safeguards, investments, and coordinated implementation necessary to prevent unintended harm and enhance survivor safety.

Ultimately, we will measure Bill C-16 not by what it recognizes, but by whether survivors and their children are safer because of it.

Read BWSS’s full submission on Bill C-16 and learn more about today’s Senate proceedings below.

https://sencanada.ca/en/committees/LCJC/meetingschedule/45-1

Safety changes everything.

 

Community Organizations Launch Coordinated Gender Safety Response for FIFA World Cup 2026

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Community Organizations Launch Coordinated Gender Safety Response for FIFA World Cup 2026

BWSS Expands Crisis-Line Services, Launches FIFA Safety Card Initiative, and Premieres New Public Service Announcement as Good Night Out Vancouver Expands Community Safety Outreach

VANCOUVER, BC, June 8, 2026 – As Vancouver prepares to welcome hundreds of thousands of visitorsduring FIFA World Cup 2026, community organizations are coming together to ensure gender safety is part of thepublic safety conversation.

Today, BWSS and Good Night Out Vancouver announced a coordinated, community-based response to gender-based violence during the six-week tournament period, highlighting the need to consider safety not only in stadiums and public gathering spaces, but also in homes, workplaces, nightlife venues, andcommunities.

While much of the planning surrounding FIFA World Cup 2026 has focused on transportation, tourism, crowds, hospitality, and public celebrations, today’s announcement focused on a different question:

What would it look like if safer streets, safer nightlife, and safer homes were all part of the same public safety conversation?

Together, BWSS and Good Night Out Vancouver represent two critical components of a comprehensive safety response during FIFA World Cup 2026: prevention in public spaces and support behind closed doors.

As part of today’s announcement, BWSS confirmed it will temporarily expand its specialized crisis-line services to 24hours a day, seven days a week throughout the six-week tournament period. The enhanced service will ensure survivors have access to information, emotional support, safety planning, risk assessment, crisis intervention, and referrals whenever they need support.

BWSS also launched its FIFA Safety Card Initiative, a practical resource designed to increase awareness of available supports and provide accessible safety information to individuals who may be experiencing violence, coercive control, stalking, harassment, or other forms of abuse.

The event also marked the premiere of The Space Between, a new public service announcement developed by BWSS to raise awareness about coercive control and the realities manysurvivors experience behind closed doors.

Set during a World Cup match, the film explores coercive control through the eyes of a survivor. Rather than depicting physical violence, The Space Between focuses on fear, monitoring, isolation, tension, and survival behaviours that often precede escalation. The film asks viewers to recognize abuse before violence escalates and challenges the tendency to dismiss warning signs that are often hidden in plain sight.

Good Night Out Vancouver announced a series of FIFA-related outreach initiatives designed to support safer nightlife and public environments throughout the tournament period. The organization will work directly within nightlife and hospitality settings to support safer venues, strengthen bystander awareness, provide community outreach, and help create safer experiences for residents, workers, and visitors.

“Everyone deserves to enjoy summer events in Vancouver safely, and creating safer environments is a shared responsibility. We appreciate that the City of Vancouver recognises this and the role Good Night Out’s outreach team plays in supporting the safety of women and other marginalized genders in our city,” said Stacey Forrester, Education Director, Good Night Out Vancouver.

“During FIFA World Cup 2026, the Good Night Out Street Team will be offering support, care, and a friendly,visible presence to anyone in the public realm, including patrons, workers and people sheltering in the street. We know that large events bring increased crowds, alcohol consumption, and social activity. We also know that while most people will have a positive experience, having additional support available helps people accessassistance if needed, which contributes to a safer and more enjoyable experience for everyone. Look for our friendly team in pink.”

International research has identified increases in reports of intimate partner violence during some major football tournaments. Sport does not cause violence against women. However, periods associated with heightened emotional intensity, alcohol consumption, gambling stress, nightlife activity, and social gatherings can intensify existing patterns of coercive control and abuse.

For many survivors, the risks associated with major sporting events are not experienced in stadiums. They are experienced at home.

Today’s announcement included a joint call for gender safety and violence prevention to be recognized as essential components of public safety planning during major international events.

Both organizations emphasized that meaningful public safety requires prevention, early intervention, survivor support, and community awareness working together.

As Vancouver prepares to welcome the world, we have a responsibility to ensure that gender safety is part ofour public safety response. Through our collaboration with Good Night Out Vancouver, we are strengthening both prevention and intervention efforts related to gender-based violence and intimate partner violence. Good Night Out is helping to create safer community and nightlife spaces, while BWSS is expanding crisis response and support for survivors. Through The Space Between and our temporary expansion to 24/7 crisis-line services, we are reminding our community that not all abuse is visible, coercive control is abuse, and survivors deserve safety. Safety changes everything.” said Angela Marie MacDougall, Executive Director, Battered Women’s Support Services.

Battered Women’s Support Services (BWSS) A feminist voice against violence and oppression, BWSS is a strong, dynamic organization that provides support and advocacy for women who have experienced abuse, as well as community education and training about violence against women. Part of a global feminist anti-violence movement, ourlong-term goal is the elimination of all violence against women and girls. www.bwss.org

Good Night Out Vancouver

Good Night Out Vancouver works to prevent sexual harassment and sexual violence in nightlife, hospitality, festival, and community spaces through education, outreach, bystander intervention, safer-space programming, and community engagement. https://www.goodnightoutvancouver.com/