Hierarchical police, military and CSIS in need of harassment reckoning: professor
VANCOUVER — Bonnie Robichaud’s ordeal started in the late 1970s when she got a unionized job as a cleaner on a military base in Ontario, and a Department of National Defence employee began sexually harassing her.
Her complaint eventually reached the Supreme Court of Canada, and in 1987 it set a precedent requiring employers to provide workplaces free of harassment and discrimination.
She says things are different now. But it’s women, and “not so much the military,” that have changed.
“Women have become more aware, so the culture has become more aware. Women up to that point didn’t even talk to each other very much about it,” she said.