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Advocates say N.S. falling short on treating intimate-partner violence as epidemic

HALIFAX - Senior Nova Scotia officials heard how the government is falling short in its efforts to tackle intimate partner violence at a legislature committee on Tuesday, about one year after government declared such violence an epidemic.

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Advocates say N.S. falling short on treating intimate-partner violence as epidemic

Nova Scotia Lt.-Gov. Arthur LeBlanc reads the speech from the throne at Province House in Halifax on Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021. 


HALIFAX - Senior Nova Scotia officials heard how the government is falling short in its efforts to tackle intimate partner violence at a legislature committee on Tuesday, about one year after government declared such violence an epidemic.

Nicole Johnson-Morrison, the associate deputy minister with the Nova Scotia Advisory Council on the Status of Women, said the unanimous adoption of a bill that declared intimate-partner violence an epidemic on Sept. 12, 2024, was a critical step in acknowledging the severity of the issue.

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