
Local volunteers in Kitchener-Waterloo have come together to support women in need.
The Waterloo Regional Labour Council raised over $4,600 for local womenโs shelters at their first annual International Womenโs Day fundraiser brunch, which was launched this
March.
The fundraiser was intended to not only collect donations but was also meant to promote the greater issue at hand โ helping out shelters and women who use their services.
โThe reason why we wanted to benefit the shelters is that we all feel that we have been pretty lucky and we have great unionized jobs,โ said Lois Iles, the co-chair of the councilโs womenโs committee.
โSo we want to bring everyone up to that level and we thought that was a great place to start, to help women who are struggling and need help to get up to the same level that we have been lucky enough to achieve,โ she added.
The money was donated to local womenโs shelters Haven House, Anselma House and Maryโs Place. It will also be rotated through the nine local womenโs shelters so that each year different shelters can benefit.
However, a more important aim of the fundraiser was to address the gross underfunding of womenโs shelters, which according to Jennifer Hutton is a growing issue in the community.
Hutton is the outreach manager of Haven House and Anselma house; she sees first-hand the large amount of women who are in need of shelters, community and safe havens.
โOf course we rely on private donors and fundraising, because thatโs a huge help and the community has been very supportive,โ Hutton said. โItโs just that you reach a point where there is donor fatigue, so thatโs always a struggle.โ
The need for womenโs shelters is only growing.
โWe know that in the Region police are getting about 6,000 calls a year [that are] domestic violence-related, so itโs pretty high numbers and we even know from those numbers that a lot of women donโt even call the police, so itโs a big problem,โ she said.
Hutton also explained that there is an initiative to start programs that focus on prevention of and education on domestic violence. These programs are a large part of the services provided by shelters, yet with limited funds this is difficult to maintain.
According to IIes, the minimum financial support right now is the reason why the community needs to help.ย ย On the impact for womenโs shelters of the money raised, Hutton said,
โItโs huge, it definitely creates a lot of relief because we know that the community is still supporting us and it really is what keeps us sustainable.โ
The International Womenโs Day fundraiser was brought to the community after organizers noticed the success of a similar fundraising brunch in Mississauga. They saw the opportunity to get involved in the community and help local women in need.
Catherine Fife, the MPP for Kitchener-Waterloo, also attended the fundraiser.
She joined Julie White,ย Uniforโs womenโs department director and Stephen Soucie, a representative from the K-W Sexual Assault Centre, who spoke out about International Womenโs Day and the struggles women face.
The committee is already planning for next yearโs event in hopes that it will be even more successful.








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