Survivor of intimate partner violence watches N.B. bill she fought for become law | 24CA News

Canada
Published 18.12.2022
Survivor of intimate partner violence watches N.B. bill she fought for become law | 24CA News

In a season of political cynicism, Colette Martin witnessed what felt to her like a legislative miracle on Friday morning. 

Martin watched as Lt.-Gov. Brenda Murphy gave royal assent to a invoice which may have spared her years of ache and trauma had it been on the books in 1997.

“It was the most incredible feeling. It’s like a dream come true for me,” Martin stated in an interview. “It’s the most beautiful experience I’ve ever had.” 

Bill 17, the Disclosure to Protect Against Intimate Partner Violence Act, was amongst 24 payments handed by the Progressive Conservative authorities this fall and made into regulation on Friday.

It will give police forces the authorized authority to inform somebody in a relationship that their companion has a historical past of inflicting intimate companion violence.

“Finally it’s happened,” Martin stated of the milestone. “It took me 25 years to get here.” 

Stabbed 37 occasions

In 1997 Martin was nearly murdered by a person she’d been in a relationship with. He stabbed her 37 occasions.

“My ex had a previous charge,” she stated. “He had broken the jaw of his ex-girlfriend, and he was from Montreal, so I had no way of knowing, and I didn’t know his background.

“If this regulation would have been in then, I’d have been capable of get the data I’d have wanted to make an knowledgeable choice about my relationship.” 

The legislation is based on a British statute known as Clare’s Law, passed in 2014.

Kris Austin, who became minister of public safety in October, introduced the bill last month. (Sinisha Karich/Shutterstock)

Martin was contacted by someone at the University of New Brunswick in 2021 who was interested in getting her help to lobby for a version of Clare’s Law here. 

Martin, who is from Baie-Sainte-Anne, contacted her then-MLA, Progressive Conservative Jake Stewart, as well as Miramichi MLA Michelle Conroy.

She also got in touch with the women’s equality branch of the government.

Soon Conroy connected her with Kris Austin, who became minister of public safety in October. He introduced the bill last month and it sped through three readings and the committee stage in 10 days. 

Murphy’s royal assent Friday was the last step.

“I by no means thought I’d get so far,” Martin said.

‘Things were done today’

Conroy spoke in the legislature Friday to introduce Martin, who was upstairs in the public gallery. All MLAs gave her a standing ovation.

“I’m simply completely, splendidly, happy with Colette, and so comfortable and proud to be part of serving to in any approach that I did and that I might have, to make it occur,” Conroy said.

“It’s fairly unbelievable, the entire thing.”

Martin said the experience was an antidote for the belief that the political system can never get anything done. “I’ll let you know one factor. Things have been performed right this moment.” 

Royal assent for other legislation

Other legislation that got royal assent Friday, the last day before MLAs adjourned for Christmas, included bills to:

  • Change the Energy and Utilities Board’s formula for setting weekly fuel prices to give the board more discretion when there are price spikes.

  • Put limits on rent increases that would allow a tribunal to spread hikes higher than inflation over two or three years.

  • Create new rules around public-sector labour disputes, giving the government the power to use replacement workers if essential employees are absent. 

  • Give the New Brunswick Museum board more authority over the design and construction of a new home for the museum in Saint John.

  • Allow private clinics to perform some surgeries billed to Medicare to free up operating room time in hospitals.

Health Minister Bruce Fitch says the legislation on surgeries allows a new clinic in Bathurst to continue cataract surgeries outside the Chaleur Regional Hospital.

A shoulder-up photo of a man wearing glasses, with his mouth slightly open
Health Minister Bruce Fitch told reporters the Bathurst clinic and others like it will relieve pressure on hospitals while ensuring procedures are still publicly funded. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

The Green Party has criticized the bill as an example of the creeping privatization of health care.

But Fitch told reporters the Bathurst clinic and others like it will relieve pressure on hospitals while ensuring procedures are still publicly funded.

“There’s numerous proposals which might be with the [regional health authorities],” he said.

“There’s a possibility to free-up area within the surgical procedure suites and get at these wait lists and wait occasions for hips and knees and a few of the different essential operations.” 

In the final Question Period of 2022, Premier Blaine Higgs suggested he’ll call byelections by March or April for three vacant ridings where Liberal MLAs have retired.

Liberal Leader Susan Holt plans to run in one of them, Bathurst East-Nepisiguit-Saint-Isidore.

“After having an opportunity to look at this session, I’m itching to get on the ground,” she stated.