Why this officer has a special role to play in the new Peel police intimate-partner violence unit - Action News
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Why this officer has a special role to play in the new Peel police intimate-partner violence unit

Peel Regional Police have set up a 48-member unit to deal with intimate-partner violence. But Det. Const. Katherine Kulbak and her colleagues won't work out of a police station. Instead, they'll be located in a community centre with a group of non-profit organizations that help families deal with abuse and violence.

Unit formed this week after several high-profile homicides and murder-suicides in Peel

In 1993, Peel Det. Const. Katherine Kulbak left an abusive husband with her baby girl in her arms and little else. Now Kulbak, 54, is one of the 48 staff of a specialized Intimate Partner Violence Unit located inside the Safe Centre of Peel in Brampton. (supplied)

Katherine Kulbak recalls leaving her abusive husband almost three decades ago.

"In 1993, I ran for my life with my baby girl in my arms, leaving my home and all my belongings behind," she said.

"I had enough. I spent so much time suffering in silence at the hands of this man. Choked up against the wall while holding my baby. Punched while I was nursing her."

But Kulbak, 54,isn't just a survivor of abuse. She's also a Peel Regional Police detective constable who'sone of the 48 staff members ona newintimate partner violence (IPV) unit.

The unit is notlocated in a police station. Instead, the teamwill be working out ofthe Safe Centre of Peel,a location in Brampton where 19non-profit community organizations join forcesunder one roof to offer support to "families affected by abuse and violence," according to its website.

Peel police launched the unit this week in response to a number of high-profile homicidesand murder-suicides including the killings of Sharanjeet Kaur and Darian Hailey Henderson-Bellman. Figures from Statistics Canada indicateintimate-partner violence accounts for 28 per cent of all police-reported violent crime in this country.

Peel Regional Police Chief Nishan Duraiappah said the system had failed these women and made preventing intimate partnerviolence a critical priority. In 2019, 13 of 31 murders in the region were domestic incidents and police responded to just under 20,000incidents of family and intimate-partner violence.

Several police vehicles parked at a shooting scene on residential street in Brampton July 28, 2020, as police officers keep people back from police tape. Last year, police responded to about 20,000 incidents of family and intimate-partner violence. (CBC)

The new IPVunit is based on the Family Justice Centre model, where multiple agencies offer services for survivors of family violence in the same location.Officers wear plain clothes and information is not shared with police without the client's consent.

"The officers they see don't look like me," said Peel police Deputy Chief Nick Milinovich.

Milinovich addedstaff in the unit are from diverse backgrounds and speak multiple languages, and some, such as, Kulbak, have experienced intimate-partner violence.

"Those perspectives and that lived experience really translates into advocacy and passion in making a difference in those people's lives."

Nneka MacGregor, the co-founder and executive director of the Women's Centre for Social Justice in North York, also known as WomenatthecentrE, says from a victim's perspectivespeaking to someone who'sexperienced intimate-partner violence can make a big difference.

"The ability to speak to another survivor in this capacity is transformational. It is transformative," she said.

An image of a woman with glasses captured during a virtual call.
Nneka MacGregor, the co-founder and executive director of the Women's Centre for Social Justice, also known as WomenatthecentrE, says for a victim of intimate partner violence, speaking to someone with the same lived experience can be 'transformational.' (CBC)

"It impacts. It shapes. It shifts the level of confidence in the survivor that you're speaking to someone who understands and isn't going to judge you," MacGregor said.

She added this unitis more welcoming to Peel's diverse population.

"At a time when there is a lot of call around to defunding police and finding better ways to support survivors, this is a really positive step."

Julie Young, a sociology professor with Brescia University College at WesternUniversity whohas studied intimate-partner violence,is working on a national action plan to deal with the issuethat she hopeswill be released in the next few months.

She says this isn't the first time the family justice centre model has been tried in Canada.Police services in Waterloo, Ont.and in British Columbia have implemented them, but Peel is the largest so far in Canada to do so.

Julie Young, a professor with Brescia University College at Western University in London, Ont., is working on a national action plan on violence against women and girls. (Caitlin Core/UWO)

Young says not only is it more efficient to have all services under one roof, she's hopeful this more integrated approach, which lessens the role ofuniformed police, will help save the lives of women and girls by getting more of them to come forward.

"Some of the reports from survivors include a fear of speaking to police, a fear of losing their children and a fear of not being understood. So there are many barriers to reporting."

And she says this approach may be more culturally appropriate and welcoming for victims who are Black, Indigeneous or other persons of colour.

"This move to collaborate services under one roof away from the police with a less fearful interaction with the police might also be a movement to an anti-oppression framework that also may have an emancipatory or empowering framework for survivors and their families."