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I'd like to call the meeting to order.
[Translation]
Welcome to meeting 122 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on the Status of Women.
[English]
I would like to remind all members of the following points. Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. All comments should be addressed through the chair. Please raise your hand if you wish to speak, whether participating in person or via Zoom.
[Translation]
Thank you in advance for your co‑operation.
[English]
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, November 27, 2023, the committee is continuing with its study of coercive behaviour.
Before we welcome our witnesses, I'd like to provide a trigger warning. We will be discussing experiences related to violence and coercive control. This may be triggering to viewers with similar experiences. If you feel distressed or need help, please advise the clerk. For all witnesses and for all members of Parliament, it is important to recognize that these are very difficult decisions and discussions. Let's try to be as compassionate in our conversations as possible.
I would now like to welcome our witnesses.
For today's panel, we have three witnesses appearing as individuals via video conference. They have chosen to remain anonymous. They will be referred to as Witness 1, Witness 2, and Witness 3. I would kindly ask all members to refer to each witness as such.
We also have, by video conference from Ottawa Victim Services, Heidi Illingworth, executive director.
Witness 1, please begin. You have up to five minutes.
Thank you.
I would like to express my deepest thanks to all of you for your commitment to the well-being of Canadian women and girls and for the opportunity to speak today.
I am a physician. My work is predominantly in cancer care. Like cancer, coercive behaviour is rampant in our society, often covert and insidious. It affects women of all races, socio-economic statuses, ages and religions.
I've been in the family court system for five years and counting, with reports of coercive behaviour made by my children and me, countered by false allegations of parental alienation made by my ex-husband. Perpetrators of coercive behaviour not only deny violence; they often distract from their behaviour by painting themselves as the victim. One common method to do so is accusing the mother of parental alienation, or PA. PA is defined as the “wilful attempts by one parent to prevent or undermine a child's relationship with the other parent”.
In April 2023, the UN special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, wrote the following:
...the discredited and unscientific pseudo-concept of parental alienation is used in family law proceedings by abusers as a tool to continue their abuse and coercion and to undermine and discredit allegations of domestic violence made by mothers who are trying to keep their children safe.
Adding to the trauma of alienation claims is the intensive deprogramming therapy in which children are subsequently forced to participate in an attempt to repair their relationship with the unsafe parent. This therapy can be administered in a variety of forms and goes by many names. It can be called reunification, reintegration or reconciliation. Even the words “family therapy”, when in the hands of certain therapists, are a benign-appearing name given to veiled reunification therapy. This therapy is not regulated and has no supporting literature indicating that it is effective. In fact, literature and numerous testimonies from youth outline its short- and long-term negative psychological consequences.
The therapy can be in the form of frequent outpatient sessions. In some instances, children are sent against their will to a multi-day overnight camp, such as Family Bridges in Canada. Some are even trafficked across the border by transport agents to camps in the U.S., such as Turning Points for Families in New York. In her report, the special rapporteur called on states to ban the use of parental alienation in family court and to ban all forms of reunification therapy. Bans on reunification therapy and camps are currently in effect in many American states.
The tactics used in reunification therapy are similar to those used in conversion therapy. Threats, intimidation, verbal abuse and forceful denial of reality are used in an attempt to deprogram youth. Conversion therapy is banned in Canada, yet reunification therapy remains a common “solution” ordered in family court. If it is not ordered, mothers are often pressured into consenting to it for fear that the court will impose a custody reversal upon them if they do not.
As a physician, I find it staggering that the Canada Health Act is overridden and children's consent to treatment is dispensed with in order to force a relationship between a child and their unsafe parent through reunification therapy. Further, children are not being believed and their wishes are disregarded, which violates the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Because my ex-husband was able to convince the custody assessor and reunification therapists that I demonstrated alienating behaviours, my children experienced two rounds of this therapy. I witnessed these therapists dismissing disclosures of abuse by telling the children they were not remembering events correctly, and telling them to forget about it and move on. Excuses were made for the unsafe parent in order to normalize or minimize their actions. Some examples include the following: “Your memory isn't very good when you're emotional; that's not how it happened” or “These are mistakes; Dad was just stressed that day.”
The more the child attempts to advocate for themselves, the more intense and aggressive the therapy becomes and the more the child's behaviour is framed as pathological, disordered, defiant and a manifestation of alienation.
Regarding recommendations, criminalizing coercive behaviour is, in theory, an excellent step forward. However, the law has to be worded in such a way that it will protect mothers who are accused of alienation. Supporters of alienation will work hard to have it framed as a form of coercive behaviour. The consequences for mothers can be catastrophic, as they will be fined or jailed for parental alienation.
If we eradicate the remedies imposed by the court, such as reunification therapy, custody reversals and no-contact orders, allegations of alienation will dissipate, as the allegations will no longer result in financially and emotionally abusive outcomes for mothers and children.
Numerous other valuable changes can be made. Standardized risk assessments should be performed by custody assessors, CAS workers and clinicians involved in these cases. Children's wishes should be respected. Mothers' and children's accounts of abuse should be believed. There should be access to children's lawyers so that children can have their wishes and experiences directly communicated to the court.
I ask for legislation that aligns with the UN recommendations, specifically to ban the use of alienation in family court and to ban all forms of reunification therapy and camps.
Thank you very much for listening.
:
Thank you very much for the opportunity to speak with you today.
I'm an 18-year-old Canadian woman and a survivor of coercive behaviour and reunification therapy. I hope to provide some insight into the broad spectrum of what Canadian youth experience under the black cloud of the preferred parent being accused of parental alienation in family court custody disputes.
Within a few days of being told about my parents' separation, my sibling and I were brought to reunification therapy to repair our relationship with our dad. When asked about our experiences at home, we communicated that our dad was absent throughout our lives and therefore a stranger to us. When he was around, he was easily angered and emotionally abusive towards us and our mother. There are many examples, but some include yelling in my face, swearing at me, calling me names, making homophobic comments to me, listening in on my conversations, sneaking up and startling me, monitoring me, forcing affection, threatening me and videoing me without my consent.
My sibling and I avoided interaction with him because of how unpredictable his behaviour was, how nervous he made us and how much he scared us. In the reunification therapy sessions, we watched our dad inappropriately flirt with the therapist and lie repeatedly. As a result, the therapist denied our reality. When we described emotionally abusive episodes, our dad told the therapist they didn't happen. The therapist told us that we needed to think of things from our dad's perspective, that we weren't remembering things correctly—
We were told that our dad was stressed and made a few mistakes, that our boundaries were incorrect, that we needed to be educated because we didn't understand relationship boundaries, and that our thinking was disordered and distorted. The therapist also asked us to look into our dad's eyes and tell him that we loved him, because telling our dad that we loved him would make things better.
Overall, we were blamed and repeatedly told we needed to change our behaviour and perspective in order to make things better. We were ignored and consistently asked about our mom's reaction to the abusive events. I didn't understand at the time, but I later realized that this was an attempt to further the accusations of alienation against my mom.
My sibling and I tried to refuse to attend therapy, but we were told we had to go. We each had one session per week with the therapist—alone, together or with our dad—for one and a half hours. On top of this, we would soon be doing activities every weekend with the therapist and our dad for four hours without our mom present, such as baking, shopping, cooking and going on outings. When we asked how long we had to do this for, there was no conclusion date provided.
After many sessions, my sibling and I refused to continue to attend. We thought that was the end of the nightmare. Instead, we started a section 30 custody assessment. The situation was even worse. The assessor spoke with the reunification therapist to get her opinion. My sibling and I again described numerous abusive episodes. My dad painted himself as the victim, and the assessor believed his numerous lies. We were not believed, not listened to and made to feel as though we were the problem. We were told we needed to get over the past and stop thinking about those events because they didn't actually happen. The assessor told me that I had black-and-white thinking, and that I needed to stop being stubborn and change my thinking. The assessor also said that I was overly emotional, that my emotions were distorting my memory, that I was defiant, immature and closed-minded, and that I was at a high risk of mental health issues if I did not have a relationship with my father.
I asked to have a lawyer represent us and directly express our wishes, but a judge would not allow it because we had an assessor involved in our case. We then had to start a second round of reunification therapy. This time, it was at an office over an hour away from our home and school. It was the same. We were told we were the problem.
The sessions with both therapists and the assessor were stressful and traumatic, against a background of the trauma I experienced with my dad for years beforehand. We then had to restart more sessions with the assessor because she wanted to assess how things with our dad were progressing in reunification therapy. Things were worse.
My dad's behaviour didn't change, and he was not held accountable by anyone throughout this process. Not one person in my life—
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Not one person in my life would characterize me as being dishonest or having disordered thinking, except for the assessor and the reunification therapists.
I, again, asked to speak to a judge. We were told we could speak to the judge, but only after his trial decision was made. I found that very upsetting, given that we wanted the opportunity to tell the judge that my dad was lying to everyone throughout this process—to tell him what had actually happened in our lives.
My entire high school career and adolescence have been tainted by these experiences. My mom being accused of parental alienation silenced her. It also silenced my sibling and me. It stripped us of our rights and access to resources to help us.
Ignoring children's reports of abuse, disregarding children's wishes regarding parenting schedules, and forcing children into reunification therapy and camps abuse Canadian children and violate the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
I'm asking this committee to please protect the rights of young victims of coercive behaviour by creating legislation to ensure that a child's lawyer or an abuse-informed clinician is granted, in order to have their experiences and wishes directly presented to the court. In addition, please create legislation to ban parental alienation accusations in family courts and all forms of reunification therapy and camps. The well-being of Canadian children depends on it.
Thank you very much.
As a mother who was labelled as an alienator, I was also labelled as someone who had engaged in coercive control by the family court.
The criminalization of coercive control on its own standing would put those whom it is meant to protect at greater risk if the use of parental alienation and its associated remedies remain an option to family court judges.
It has now been 1,033 days since I've had contact with my child because of the use of parental alienation as a legal strategy. No contact means no visits, no cards, no celebrating holidays, no phone calls.
My judgment stated an immediate reversal of custody, inclusive of a police enforcement clause. The non-preferred parent was granted exclusive custody, sole decision-making and an indefinite restraining order, and ordered to participate in a second round of reunification therapy. This order is in direct contradiction of the recommendations of the Office of the Children's Lawyer, who recommended that I should have sole custody and decision-making power.
In 2020, Professor Joan Meier published empirical evidence that alienation claims are effective in undermining mothers and double their rate of losing custody of their children. Our family's judgment further legitimizes this study and is consistent with her findings as published in the Journal of Child Custody regarding children who have been forcibly removed from their preferred parent: “The children in these cases suffered from anxiety, depression, PTSD, self-harm, and suicidality, and some repeatedly ran away, thus exposing themselves to further harm of homelessness and sexual trafficking.”
The content from this journal has now become my child's reality. My child's clinical impression, as documented by the Hospital for Sick Children and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, is aligned with the Journal of Child Custody regarding children who have been forcibly removed from their preferred parent.
Since the reversal of custody and no contact for almost three years, my child has been diagnosed with suicidal ideation, anxiety, depression and self-harm. Prior to the reversal of custody, my child did not have any concerns with mental health. Once again, the details of my case align with the Journal of Child Custody, as my child has also run away from school and home. Every time, she has been retraumatized, and her cries for help have been met with assault, forcible confinement and punishment.
The typical outcome in family court cases like mine is that the preferred parent is erased from the child's life. The remedies associated with parental alienation are hypocritical. In order to repair the relationship between the child and the non-preferred parent, they completely remove the preferred parent. They stop any and all contact immediately with the preferred parent, family members and friends, and even change schools, doctors and physicians.
Another implication for children affected by the pseudoscience of parental alienation is that all resources put in place to assist children, such as the children's aid societies, Ontario children's lawyers, clinicians, school social workers and mental health practitioners become null and void when there are accusations of parental alienation. Not one of the above agencies has made any attempt to help my child. As a non-preferred parent presents the court order, any concerns for the child's well-being, mental health or life are disregarded.
Accusations of parental alienation can be as simple as the preferred parent not having pictures of the non-preferred parent in the common areas of their home, the children not smiling in pictures taken with the non-preferred parent or the children not telling the non-preferred parent that they love them, and the preferred parent is alienating by not forcing the children to do so. This applies to physical affection. The preferred parent has to force the children to hug the non-preferred parent; otherwise, this is seen as alienation.
Clinical documents demonstrate that my child's views and preferences have remained the same, to be in the primary care of her mother. School and medical reports are consistent that my child is intelligent, mature and a top achiever, yet her views and preferences are still not respected.
Children are the ultimate victims in this process that is imposed upon them by a judge who follows the pseudoscience of alienation and all the unethical and traumatizing remedies associated with it.
In conclusion, I recommend that the Canadian government adopt the recommendations of the UN special rapporteur and NAWL. I additionally recommend the removal of the family court's ability to order custody reversals, no contact orders, reunification therapies in all forms and the use of transport agents.
Thank you.
:
Thank you so much for the opportunity to address the committee.
I want to thank the three witnesses who spoke before me just now for their very powerful statements.
I'm here today representing Ottawa Victim Services, a community-based agency that's mandated to provide 24-7 crisis intervention support to victims of crime and tragic circumstances across the city of Ottawa. In 2023-24, we served 4,292 clients, of whom 1,287 were survivors of domestic and intimate partner violence, which is about 30% of our caseload. Our clients regularly disclose many forms of coercive and controlling behaviours by their intimate partners, including isolation, intimidation, monitoring, restricting access to financial resources, emotional abuse and threats, and other forms of psychological manipulation, which undermine their autonomy and self-worth. In our daily work on the front lines, we do see the need for a criminal law response to coercive control.
Currently, there are offences in the Criminal Code that are used to respond to situations of domestic and intimate partner violence, but these offences were designed to respond to the problem of men's public violence against other men. Canada lacks specific and clear legislation outlining what abuse is in the context of intimate or private relationships. In my view, there has been a deliberate failure on the part of the state to recognize private violence that occurs in the domestic context for the epidemic that it is today. This is largely because it is a gendered issue negatively affecting women, children and gender-diverse folks. The law does not currently reflect victims' lived realities or the real nature of harm, as you just heard, because it fails to include many aspects of abuse in the intimate context. I do believe that a shift is needed in order to significantly impact how the state responds to domestic violence in Canada.
I think we can make a difference by, first, broadening the definition of abuse. Our existing laws focus on physical violence or threats of physical harm. Coercive control includes a range of behaviours, such as psychological manipulation, isolation and financial control, which can be just as damaging but aren't captured by existing laws. By criminalizing coercive control, the legal system would recognize and address these forms of abuse and provide a broader scope of protection to victims who may not have experienced physical harm but are often paralyzed by fear from the psychological abuse and manipulation of their partners.
I also think what is really important and really needed is a cultural shift. We need to start thinking about coercive control as a serious issue rather than as a minor, private or normal aspect of relationships. Intimate partner violence is an epidemic, and we need to take steps to fully address it. Criminalization will help to change public perceptions, reduce stigma around seeking help and better define what is abuse and what is a healthy relationship.
Also, it's really critical that we look at early intervention. Criminalizing coercive control could lead to earlier intervention by the authorities. We want to be able to intervene, as service providers, before behaviours escalate to physical violence. We can prevent more severe abuse and provide support to victims earlier. This is really key to the prevention of femicide in Canada. Many domestic homicide reviews and academic research in the U.K., Canada, Australia and the U.S.A. have identified coercive control as a significant precursor in many cases of domestic homicide. Coercive control often precedes, accompanies or escalates into more severe forms of violence, including intimate partner homicide. The recent CKW inquest into the murder of three women in Lanark County, Ontario, recommended the following in recommendation 85: “Include 'coercive control', as defined in the Divorce Act, as a criminal offence on its own or as a type of assault under s. 265 of the Criminal Code.”
I cannot emphasize this enough: Coercive control is a warning sign. Numerous studies have found that coercive control is a common feature in the histories of domestic homicide cases. Victims often experience prolonged periods of psychological abuse, manipulation and control before the situation escalates to violence or homicide.
I want to make a couple of recommendations today and echo the words of the three witnesses before me.
As presented to you by the National Association of Women and the Law, we know that many victims of intimate partner violence do not go to the police. However, those who have children will interact with the law in the context of family law. Abusers are known to continue their violence and control post-separation in the form of judicial violence. Therefore, it's important to also address coercive control in family law. Specifically, we echo the calls of NAWL for the committee to recommend that the Government of Canada amend the Divorce Act to ban parental alienation accusations from being used in family court.
I would also like to echo the recommendation made to you earlier by the Canadian Center for Women's Empowerment, which is to have the government recognize the gendered aspect of domestic violence and how coercive control is deeply rooted in gender inequality. We recommend increased funding of services to adequately protect and support victim-survivors before and after separation. We recommend a holistic framework that can adequately support and protect women in abusive situations, especially with respect to different intersectional realities, such as newcomers, immigrants, gender-diverse people, Black, indigenous and other persons of colour, disabled persons, seniors, and young women, who are all at an increased risk of violence.
Lastly, we recommend that economic and financial abuse must also be included within the context of coercive control and include post-separation abuse in considerations if we are moving toward a coercive control offence.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you so much to our witnesses today for being here on our study on coercive control. Your voice matters and we're very happy to have you here.
I will start with Ms. Illingworth.
Ms. Illingworth, thank you for the work that you do.
When we see an increase of 50% in crime, that means 50% more victims. I think that's a key thing that people forget when they're looking at a lot of the stats that we see.
One thing you said before was, “Our findings were that the CVBR [the Canadian Victims Bill of Rights] has largely failed to empower and support those harmed by crime. I called for a Parliamentary review of the Act and issued 15 recommendations to the federal government for legislative and administrative measures.”
What response have you received from the government?
:
We've heard a lot of testimony here about.... Ms. Illingworth, one of your recommendations was to remove the term “parental alienation” from the Divorce Act.
I'm going to go to Witness 1, who described herself as a physician.
You suggested standardized risk assessment. Obviously, being a physician, you have clarity around the structure of systems. How do you prevent parental alienation? That is real, even though the testimony we've heard today is awful. It's a violation. What has happened to you is unacceptable. It's criminal. What would you recommend we put in to ensure that parents aren't using their children as leverage to alienate them? Is there wording that can be changed? What is your recommendation, Witness 1?
Ms. Illingworth, you are free to jump in with suggestions on that as well, if you wish. What we're looking for is what that language would look like. If we were to remove that from the Divorce Act, how would we still ensure the safety of the children?
:
I think we need to look historically at this phenomenon of parental alienation. It was created in the early eighties by a disgraced psychologist who used the concept of parental alienation as a method to distract from sexual abuse accusations against fathers. It has been used as a vector of abuse against women since then. You can all google who started this; his name was Richard Gardner. He said, “There is a bit of pedophilia in every one of us” and “The child who has suffered bona fide [sexual] abuse may very well have enjoyed the experience”. That is how this started.
This concept of parental alienation has morphed and is used in settings where men are accused by the mom and/or children of abuse. They're false allegations used to distract from the abuse. Sadly, there has been a lot of case law across the world—even here in Canada—where as soon as parental alienation is raised, women are down a rabbit hole.
The word “alienation”, in the setting of abuse, has to be eradicated. The way to do that is to have risk assessments on the front lines so that, from the get-go in these custody battles, we can determine whether or not abuse is present. That—
I have to say, as other members of this committee have said, that this is some of the most disturbing testimony we have heard.
I'd like to start with Witness 2.
What you described is absolutely a violation of your fundamental rights. You mentioned the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. I just want you to know that what you are doing today, by speaking out, is going to help a lot of other children. I know it's really hard, but I want you to know that we appreciate what you're doing. The fact that your basic rights.... You wanted to speak to a judge because you believed that this would actually make a difference.
Are there safeguards? You talked about banning all forms of reunification therapy and other things. Your voice was silenced, but are there safeguards in the judicial system that could be built in to allow children to have a voice and a direct remedy? Is there anything you can think of that we could do to make sure that what happened to you doesn't happen to anybody else?
Thank you for your first remarks. I very much appreciate it. I want to apologize for speaking too quickly. I was quite nervous.
To comment on what you said, I think it's very important that what I wanted to happen does happen: for example, that children get the opportunity to speak with the judge prior to the decision being made. It was quite frustrating not to have that opportunity.
In addition, involving children's lawyers, if the child cannot communicate directly with the judge, and having an intermediate party like a children's lawyer who takes the words of the child exactly, without twisting them or manipulating them in the ways the assessor did, and who is then communicating the child's wishes to the judge, I think is an alternative solution as well.
:
I would like to come back to that, certainly.
I have concerns that many of the clients whom we help and serve in our jurisdiction cannot access police support. There are no charges in their case unless there is a physical incident of violence. All of what is happening in that relationship that is very abusive is basically observed by patrol officers. When they come on the scene, they know something is going on that isn't right within this relationship. Survivors are describing economic and financial abuse and control. They are being isolated and intimidated. They have been threatened and they are very fearful.
Right now, the law is really focused on physical incidents of violence, and that's when charges can be laid. We have so many survivors who are outside of the scope of a criminal law response. They don't know where to go to get help, and they don't know how to get out of these situations. Luckily, sometimes we have officers who recognize that there is a problem and they will flag it to victim services teams so that we can intervene and do some education around what may be happening. This may help people to recognize the abusive situation they're in and get them supports to increase safety or provide them with options around perhaps fleeing and looking at new housing to get out of the situation they're in.
Others, such as in the testimony you've heard today, maybe are not in the criminal justice system at all but are trying to separate or get a divorce from the abuser. If they have raised concerns around their partner being abusive, they face really dire consequences in the family law system in terms of being accused of parental alienation.
I think we have serious work to do in terms of dealing with coercive behaviour in both the criminal system and the family law system in Canada.
My time is limited, so I'll come back to that in a subsequent question.
As a teenager, I was struck by an awareness campaign in Quebec called “Violence: It's not always striking, but it always hurts!” It opened my eyes to the fact that there are different types of violence and that you don't need a bruise to be a victim of violence. This has been a concern of mine for quite some time.
You mentioned it in your opening remarks. You also talked about culture change. First of all, it has to be recognized from a criminal standpoint. Second, officers must be made aware of coercive control and properly understand its implications under the Criminal Code.
How do you envisage education initiatives for stakeholders, from the police community to the justice system?
I have 30 seconds left. We can come back to it later, but you can start your answer.
:
Thank you so much, Chair.
I want to start out by thanking all the witnesses for being here and sharing very difficult testimony. I want to honour that.
My first question is for Witness 1.
You were talking about abuse. We know there is a continuum of abuse, coercive control being part of that, often resulting in physical abuse. I know we're studying coercive control. One of my concerns, at this point, about criminalizing coercive control is that I don't know whether we have adequately addressed parental alienation, and if that will place victims at greater risk.
I want to very quickly quote the NAWL report:
Victims of domestic violence are particularly at risk of being accused of “parental alienation” when they raise safety concerns. The idea that mothers fabricate allegations of violence to gain an advantage in family court and then brainwash their children to fear their father reinforces myths around family violence, marginalizes concerns for the child’s safety, and puts women who denounce domestic violence at increased risk of being disbelieved and even punished.
Do you think parental alienation is often used as a counter-argument for coercive control?
:
Some lines that stand out to me from that UN report are that children have the right to give opinions freely and to have adults listen to them. I was not listened to. It also says that I have the right to protection from being hurt or mistreated in body or in mind, and I feel that I did not have that protection.
It also says that, if parents are divorced, you have a right to stay in contact with both unless it isn't best for you. It wasn't best for me, and yet I was consistently encouraged, by the therapists the court mandated me to see, to remain in contact and, like Witness 3 testified, to force affection. I was told that I had to tell my father that I loved him, that I had to hug him, etc.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I'd like to thank our witnesses for such poignant testimony. Again, it's quite distressing for us. I don't know if my colleagues agree, but what we can take away today is that these young victims are not being heard or listened to.
In fact, a thought occurred to me. Today, at the age of 14, a person can see a doctor for specific services, which will be confidential. People will be considerate. However, if that same person speaks to a judge or a lawyer, they turn a deaf ear. At least, so I have gathered from our discussions thus far.
Ms. Illingworth, we've heard testimony from women who told us that if they had known the aftermath, they wouldn't have left the family home. We are talking about parental alienation, deprivation and false charges, for example. One of them told us about the economic problems she was experiencing.
Do you hear that kind of comment or observation from women who take refuge in your shelter, that the price for leaving the violent environment is even higher than the price for staying at home?
I would like to ask a question of Witness 2, who is so young—only 18 years old.
Welcome, and thank you for your testimony.
I have some rather technical questions to ask you about your experience, so that we have a clear understanding of what these therapies are, since you've seen them up close.
First, you said that you were in this situation with your sibling. Are you the younger one?
:
Hello, witnesses. This is Lisa Hepfner chipping in here.
I met with the three of you a couple of months ago, and I was extremely moved by your stories. I'm very glad that you've accepted the invitation to come and share with the entire committee. I think it's something that we all need to hear.
I would like to clarify something that we heard earlier from my colleague. This isn't something that's in the Divorce Act that they want us to take out; this is something they want us to change so that we can't use parental alienation in family court.
One thing that I find very disturbing—and I haven't really heard anybody talk about it yet—is that there's a sort of cottage industry growing out of this tendency to use parental alienation. These so-called therapists, the family reunification people, are the same people advising judges that this therapy is needed. Then the children and the parents are forced into particular therapy with that particular person.
Does anybody want to chip in if they've heard the same thing?
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Ms. Illingworth, I would like to pursue our conversation. Two and a half minutes go by quickly.
On the subject of coercive control, last Friday, I met again with a member of Quebec's National Assembly, who worked on the recommendations in the “Rebuild Trust” report.
She asked me for an update as to any progress on the coercive control issue at the federal level. This is a recommendation in the “Rebuild Trust” report, which deals with the problems of violence against women in Quebec.
Much has been said about the importance of this observation. We must take action on coercive control to prevent situations from getting worse. In your opening remarks, you said that coercive control is often a red flag and is a common feature of femicides.
Can you tell us how, by taking action on coercive control, interventions might be more preventive, before the situation reaches the point of femicide?
:
Yes, I think it's very important for police to have training to recognize these behaviours as abusive so they can, if not intervene with charges as of yet, intervene by making referrals to victim services so that social workers can intervene with these clients and hopefully provide some crisis counselling, safety information, services and planning and help assess whether they are ready to leave or not.
We know that coercive and controlling behaviours can escalate to more severe forms of abuse and are a precursor to domestic homicides. If we do change the law and criminalize it, I think we will be able to have, hopefully, a much reduced incidence. Basically, every second day, a woman or girl in Canada is killed by a partner or a former partner. This is a really serious issue, and we haven't put enough focus on tackling this violence in our communities.
I do think that moving toward criminalization will do that, but, of course, with the caveat that we need training for police, judges and officials.
I want to continue on with you, Ms. Illingworth.
I don't think there's anybody on the committee who doesn't believe that coercive control exists and is harmful, but there are a couple of things that have been said that kind of make me feel like we're taking steps before we've put other steps in place to make sure we're actually protecting people. One is banning the use of parental alienation, and the other is the training of judges and police officers who can make an assessment. We know, certainly in the NAWL report, that when victims bring up issues of abuse, it's not uncommon for judges to defer to their trying to alienate the other parent.
Do you think we need those things in place before we can move forward safely with a law on coercive control?
I want to go back to Witness 1.
I really value your input. Obviously, as a physician, you're very clever, and you've obviously been through some horrible lived experience, which gives you a lot of credibility in this coercive control study.
I'm looking at the Divorce Act and the new changes that were put in. What I see is that, no matter what it says, an abuser or somebody who is effective at coercive control and manipulation is going to be able to use whatever is written to their benefit. How do you word this in a way that prevents an abuser from manipulating the system? I've heard from other witnesses who don't have the money to defend themselves, or the financial means to do this in court. I'm worried about the language we're going to use. Will it ultimately protect parents and children when a judge spends two minutes with them and makes a ruling? I don't even know if there are psychiatrists specialized enough in coercive control who can testify.
Does Witness 1 want to answer that?
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to all the witnesses.
Thank you, Witness 2. You're helping other kids. I'm sorry you went through a lot, but thank you for your strength and for the courageous testimony that you're giving to us today.
We heard about the removal of reunification therapy. I think all witnesses have said that. I know that my colleagues were also talking about education and training, taking education and training initiatives to the justice system to empower school education. What do you think? Can you elaborate on what should be done?
I will start with Ms. Illingworth.
:
Absolutely, I think it's important.
I think the first misstep that happens, in the majority of these cases, is the lack of recognition from the outset that this is a case of abuse. Most of these cases get labelled as high conflict, where the assumption is that both parties are equally responsible for what's going on. The way to have a victim-centred approach would be to not.... I mean, all of us can be educated, but putting that education into action is what's really needed, so that, from the very beginning, every professional involved with these cases is supporting the victims and believing the victims, the women and children.
:
I think it has to be expanded, especially in this post-litigation scenario, to include all of the forms of post-litigation abuse that occur, whether it be undermining the mother, bankrupting her by continuing to bring her to court or using the children through alienation accusations and reunification therapy.
There are so many things that can be included, like financial abuse, spiritual abuse, isolation, monitoring and stalking. Again, it's very difficult to collect data on it. A lot of it is so nuanced and covert, so collected data has to show a pattern of abuse over time.
I feel like this issue is of some urgency in Canada, and I'm not sure how long a longitudinal study could go on for before we have the data. I feel like we know this exists already in Canada and across the world.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I looked at the Canadian Femicide Observatory for Justice and Accountability website, as it was mentioned during one of the rounds of questions. It says that 122 women and girls were killed by violence in 2024. That number is abhorrent. It means that, on average, a woman or girl is killed every two days somewhere in this country, mostly by men. In other words, on average, a woman is killed by her male partner once a week.
Those numbers are truly chilling.
The Observatory site raises, of course, the issue of coercive control legislation—we've already discussed that, Ms. Illingworth—but also, interestingly, the issue of public health. It would be good to offer a continuum of services to victims. The legislation makes it possible to recognize victims earlier, but also—perhaps afterwards—to allow them to receive support services from community groups or even within the health care system.
Ms. Illingworth, in your comments you touched on the issue of investment. Beyond the legislative side, you mentioned the need for enough investment and transfers, not only within the justice system to train judges, for example, but also in the health care system, to support victims.
Is that correct?
:
Thank you so much, Chair.
We've heard disturbing testimony today. I am just looking at the NAWL report. One concerning finding is that the situation in terms of parental accusations of parental alienations has in fact worsened. The report says:
“Parental alienation” is a controversial concept used in clinical and legal settings to describe children who refuse or resist contact with a parent. Despite its lack of scientific validity, this theory “has gained considerable traction and has been widely used to negate allegations of domestic and sexual abuse within family court systems on a global scale”.
I know that we spoke about getting rid of reunification therapy, but because parental alienation is still being allowed to be used, I'm also concerned that it's going to make victims of violence—without this step put in place, without getting rid of parental alienation—less likely to report abuse or pursue things legally to protect themselves and their children, if ultimately parental alienation will be used to further victimize victims of coercive control.
I'm wondering if Witness 1 could speak about it—and maybe, if we have time, Ms. Illingworth.
:
It started in my dating relationship with extreme jealousy. Every phone conversation started with, “Have you talked to any guys?” I was restricted and isolated in terms of interacting with other men in my personal and professional life. It escalated to making comments on my physical appearance, feeding on that insecurity. There was one episode of him putting his hand on my neck to hold me down on a bed.
From there it escalated, whereby he was constantly monitoring my spending, calling me names, putting me down, making negative comments, telling me that the best thing that ever happened to me wasn't being a doctor but marrying him, and telling me that I don't make very much money. It was a lot of disparaging comments.
Then it escalated to me being fearful of him physically. There were very threatening, ominous looks and threatening words, so progressively I became more isolated. I was walking on eggshells and always trying to please him.
Once again, we just so appreciate this testimony today. I think it's really valuable.
We've talked about this a little bit today. There is some concern that if we criminalize coercive control, it could be used against victims. It could be used against women. Do any of you have thoughts about how to prevent that from happening? In the U.K., for example, that has been a problem, when they introduced a coercive control bill.
Heidi, you look like you have an answer.