Women’s shelters facing staff shortages amid COVID, high rates of gendered violence
OTTAWA — Women’s shelter workers are feeling even more pressure as the latest COVID-19 wave hits Canada, fuelled by the highly transmissible Omicron variant.
Lise Martin, executive director of Women’s Shelters Canada, says shelters are overwhelmed in part because of significant staff turnover and shortages due to workers in COVID-19 isolation.
Martin says those in the sector were already working under pandemic-era strains, including a spike in demand for shelter and services along with rising rates of gender-based violence across the country.
Erin Griver, director of women’s services at Mission Services of Hamilton, Ont., says their women’s shelters have seen outbreaks and staff testing positive throughout the pandemic, but the current rates of infection moving through their sites have not been seen before.