Indigenous helpline launches to help families when someone disappears - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:49 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Indigenous helpline launches to help families when someone disappears

A helpline has been set up to help people in New Brunswick whove been affected by the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women crisis.

Helpline will provide resources and support to families of missing and murdered Indigenous women

Amanda LeBlanc, president of the New Brunswick Aboriginal Peoples Council, said the catalyst for the local helpline was the fear that Atlantic Canada would be ignored in the wake of the MMIW crisis. (CBC)

A New Brunswick helpline has been set up for familiesand friends of missing and murdered Indigenous women.

The helplinewas launchedby the New Brunswick Aboriginal PeoplesCounciland will be staffed by Gignoo Transition House, an Indigenous safe house based in Fredericton.

Jula Hughes, a law professor at the University of New Brunswick, said the goal was to create something to help families deal with the police at the time someone disappears and with the news media and the justice system.

"How do you assist somebody making that police call? How do you help them prepare for it? How do you help people prepare for the media onslaught that will invariably come about when something becomes, you know, a bad outcome," said Hughes.

The helplineispart ofthe larger "Looking Out For Each Other" campaign in Atlantic Canada and Quebec.

Hughes said Indigenous communities have already been doing much of the work helping families of missing and murdered women, and the structure of the helpline came out of consultation with Indigenous organizations.

Amanda LeBlanc, the president of the New Brunswick council, said the catalyst for the helpline was the fear that Atlantic Canada would be ignored during theMMIW crisis.

"Because our numbers are so low compared to the bigger city centres, they think it doesn't happen," said LeBlanc.

"Homelessness for example. People don't see it the way they see it on the streets of Winnipeg, Toronto, Vancouver, but it is very prevalent here. It just looks a lot different. It's no different with incidents with missing Indigenous women."

Dispelling myths

LeBlancsaid Gignoo is key to the operation of the helpline.

"It's work they're already doing in the community now," said LeBlanc.

"They're helping women and children. They're already trained in how to receive calls similar to this."

LeBlanc said the helpline will inform people about what it needed during a missing persons case, provide legal information and dispel myths, such as the myth that you can only report someone missing after 24 hours.

The helpline number is 1-833-MMI-FIND and operates 24 hours a day.

With files from Information Morning Fredericton