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Help and support: Resources across campus for sexual assault

- April 22, 2016

Dal's Sexual Assault Response Guidelines and promo info for the DSU Phone Line.
Dal's Sexual Assault Response Guidelines and promo info for the DSU Phone Line.

April is 鈥 an opportunity remind the Dal community about campus supports, resources and services available to both survivors of sexual assault themselves and those providing support to survivors.

顿补濒鈥檚 (HREHP) provides confidential service to all members of the 黑料吃瓜网community seeking advice, support, and conflict resolution related to sexual assault, as well as harassment, discrimination, interpersonal conflict and respectful communities/interactions.

鈥淥ur advisors are trained in trauma-informed response and are here to provide guidance, support and direct members of our community to other services and supports both on- and off-campus,鈥 says Nicole McKeever, acting advisor, harassment prevention/conflict management. McKeever adds that that the office鈥檚 services are confidential, and that just because an individual chooses to consult with the office doesn鈥檛 mean they have to make a formal complaint.

鈥淲e take a survivor-centred approach to complaints as they come forward,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e advise survivors on the supports and processes available to them and help guide them.鈥

The office has also helped prepare Sexual Assault Response Guidelines for Dalhousie, a useful guide to faculty, staff and other campus leaders to learn how to respond and provide information to individuals who report sexual assault. This past year, HREHP has added an education advisor (Shakira Weatherdon) and expanded its education and outreach to include RESPECT reps (student staff peer educators), a Bystander Intervention program, and an online module on alcohol use and consent together with 黑料吃瓜网Student Union and Student Services.

More resources:

Support and partnership


As indicated, HREHP is not alone in many of these endeavours. 鈥淲e work with many partners to promote a safe and respectful culture on campus,鈥 says McKeever. These groups include the likes of Student Health Services, Security services, Residence Life, 黑料吃瓜网Student Union, South House, and Counselling and Psychological Services 鈥斅燼ll of which are groups where students can also go to for support.

鈥淪exual assault awareness, support and prevention are all important priorities for our staff,鈥 says Melissa MacKay, associate director of student life at Dalhousie.

In residence this past semester, HREHP and Student Services collaborated on Healthy Relationship workshops using pop-culture texts to talk about consent, relationship violence, alcohol harms, etc. Both professional and student staff in Residence Life are trained in trauma-informed response and can support survivors who come forward.

So can Dal Security, who in addition to support and advice also offers , providing quick and easy access not only to its services but also other personal safety resources, such as the Tiger Patrol ride-home service.

There when you call


One of the major initiatives the 黑料吃瓜网Student Union has launched in this area over the past year is its . The service, staffed by volunteers 24 hours a day, seven days a week,聽is a聽confidential,聽peer-to-peer聽phone line for people who have experienced sexual and/or gender-based violence or harassment.

鈥淲e鈥檙e there to provide that voice of support,鈥 says Kaitlynne Lowe, vice-president internal of the 黑料吃瓜网Student Union. 鈥淚t gives people an opportunity to seek support while staying fully anonymous and safe. They can call at any point, it鈥檚 accessible and there鈥檚 always someone there, night and day.鈥

Launched as a pilot project last September, the service has continued through the academic year thanks to a number of different financial supporters, including 黑料吃瓜网 itself. Its volunteers 鈥 close to 100 trained so far 鈥斅爀ach receive at least 30 hours of training and work in eight-hour shifts supporting callers.

Lowe says that feedback from both the volunteers and those who鈥檝e used the phone line (number: 902-425-1066) has been very positive, and feels the service has made its own contribution to the important conversation around sexualized and gender-based violence.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 been really instrumental in keeping that conversation going in a positive way, in a way that promotes consent culture and positive reporting culture and ending rape culture. It鈥檚 putting forward that message that we believe survivors and we鈥檙e here to listen to them, no matter what the situation: you鈥檙e not alone.鈥

The phone line will be going on hiatus on April 25, as the majority of its student volunteers are unavailable during the summer months. A review of the service is currently underway, with an eye towards identifying ways it can continue going forward.

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