Government of Yukon announces funding recipients under the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence

The Government of Yukon is pleased to announce $2.2 million in funding to support Yukon-based women’s and gender equity-seeking non-governmental organizations. The funding, which covers the 2023–24 and 2024–25 fiscal years, was made available through the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence.

The funding will support projects that fall under Pillar one and Pillar two of the National Action Plan to End Gender-based Violence: Support for victims, survivors and their families and Prevention.

The recipients of the funding are:

  • Liard Aboriginal Women’s Society
  • Skookum Jim Friendship Centre
  • Yukon Status of Women Council
  • Whitehorse Aboriginal Women’s Circle
  • Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre
  • Yukon Aboriginal Women’s Council
  • Queer Yukon
  • Yukon Anti-Poverty Coalition
  • Yukon Women in Trades and Technology
  • Les Essentielles

This funding is available through a bilateral agreement announced last year between the Government of Yukon and the Government of Canada under the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence.

This investment will support efforts to strengthen and build capacity in the gender-based violence prevention sector in the territory. It will help enable funded organizations to better address the intersectional needs of diverse populations, including those experiencing gender-based violence in rural and remote communities.

The Yukon implementation plan for the National Action Plan to End Gender-based Violence was written to align with the Yukon strategy on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and Two-Spirit+ People and will support its implementation.

Community organizations are at the heart of systemic change and supporting their life-saving work remains a top priority for the Government of Canada. The funding announced today will help these organizations chart a path towards building safer communities across the Yukon for Indigenous women and girls and 2SLGBTQQIA+ people.

The Honourable Marci Ien, Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth

Congratulations and heartfelt thank you to the funding recipients for the essential and sometimes life-saving services they offer to those affected by gender-based violence and their families. I am grateful for the partnership of the Government of Canada as we work together to prevent gender-based violence and create systemic change through community-led solutions. Through the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence, I am confident we can make meaningful and lasting change for generations to come.

Minister responsible for the Women and Gender Equity Directorate in Yukon Jeanie McLean

Quick facts 
  • The National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence focuses on three priority areas:

    1. Increasing prevention efforts;
    2. Reaching underserved and at-risk populations; and
    3. Stabilizing the gender-based violence prevention sector. 
  • It also includes five pillars intended to guide national efforts towards:

    1. support for victims, survivors and their families;
    2. prevention;
    3. a responsive justice system;
    4. implementing Indigenous-led approaches; and
    5. social infrastructure and enabling environment.
  • The Government of Canada will be investing $16.4 million over four years to support the implementation of the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence in the Yukon. This amount will be cost-matched by the Government of Yukon. 

  • Nationally, over 11 million people aged 15 and over have experienced intimate partner violence at least once since the age of 15. In 2009, it was estimated that intimate partner violence has an economic cost of $7.4 billion annually and sexualized violence, a cost of $4.8 billion annually.

  • Gender-based violence is a significant and complex issue in the Yukon, with rates three to four times higher than the national average. Over 61 per cent of women and 61 per cent of men in the Yukon have experienced at least one physical or sexualized assault since the age of 15.

  • In 2021, the Yukon was among the top three provinces and territories with the highest rates of human trafficking per 100,000 population. 

  • Children and youth, specifically girls, were more likely to be victims of family violence in the territories than in the provinces, with Nunavut reporting the highest rate, followed by the Northwest Territories and the Yukon in 2019.

  • Since 2021, the Government of Canada has committed $1.14 billion to advance the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence, including $539.3 million over five years to support provinces and territories in their efforts to implement the National Action Plan. 

  • The list of projects funded under the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence: 

     

    Organization

     

    Project

    Pillar

    Les Essentielles

    Inclusive Communications

    Prevention

    Les Essentielles

    Diversity and Inclusion Evaluation of Services

    Victim Support

    Liard Aboriginal Women’s Society

    Stories from the Drum

    Prevention
    (Y1: 2023-2024)

    Liard Aboriginal Women’s Society

    Youth for Dignity

    Prevention
    (Y2: 2024-2025)

    Liard Aboriginal Women’s Society

    Compassionate Inquiry Circles

    Victim Support

    Queer Yukon

    Support and connection for 2SLGBTQIA+ and allied youth

    Prevention

    Queer Yukon

    Support and connections for 2SLGBTQIA+ Yukoners victim of gender-based violence

    Victim Support

    Skookum Jim Friendship Centre

    Prevention of Gender-Based Violence via redefining masculinity for indigenous men and boys

    Prevention

    Skookum Jim Friendship Centre

    Increasing Safety at SJFC

    Victim Support

    Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre

    Enhancing Violence Prevention Programming

    Prevention

    Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre

    Rebuilding Resilience Project

    Victim Support

    Whitehorse Aboriginal Women’s Circle

    Enhancing Cultural Programming

    Prevention

    Whitehorse Aboriginal Women’s Circle

    Developing overall safety and competency at WAWC

    Victim Support

    Yukon Anti-Poverty Coalition

    Increasing safety and programming for lone parent families at Whitehorse Affordable Housing – 60 Selkirk

    Prevention

    Yukon Anti-Poverty Coalition

    Increasing programming and presence at Whitehorse Affordable Housing - 60 Selkirk

    Victim Support

    Yukon Aboriginal Women’s Council

    Rural Outreach Pilot Project

    Prevention

    Yukon Aboriginal Women’s Council

    YAWC's Elders-in-Residence and Counsellors-in-Residence Enhancement Initiative

    Victim Support

    Yukon Status of Women Council

    Report on the impacts of COVID-19 on Yukon womens’ housing, livelihoods and well-being

    Prevention

    Yukon Status of Women Council

    Challenging stigmatizing legislation on sex workers

    Victim Support

    Yukon Women in Trades and Technology

    Sustainability building within the organization and community

    Prevention

     

Backgrounder 
  • The National Action Plan was officially endorsed by Federal Provincial Territorial Status of Women Ministers on November 9, 2022.
  • In April 2023, the Women and Gender Equity Directorate began negotiating on behalf of the Government of Yukon a Bilateral Funding Agreement with Women and Gender Equality Canada to:
    • match $16.397 million in federal funding with Government of Yukon funds from 2023–24 to 2026–27; and
    • negotiate Yukon’s implementation plan to support the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence.
  • Backgrounder from the Government of Canada
Media contact 

Laura Seeley
Cabinet Communications
867-332-7627
Laura.Seeley@yukon.ca

Weronika Murray
Communications Analyst, Women and Gender Equity Directorate
867- 667-3030
weronika.murray@yukon.ca

News release #: 
24-099