Skip to content

Edmonton sex assault centre pauses new clients, blames province for cutting funds

EDMONTON — The Sexual Assault Centre of Edmonton has stopped taking new clients and blames the province for cutting funds.
ae710032ca53bb042ac72345b9a0e08efa6945bdf0f173199872b599944c38d5
Alberta Minister of Children and Family Services Searle Turton speaks to the media in Calgary, Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

EDMONTON — The Sexual Assault Centre of Edmonton has stopped taking new clients and blames the province for cutting funds.

The centre offers counselling and other support to those dealing with sexual assault and says it's scrambling to find other avenues of help for the 20 or so new clients who come through its doors each week.

Mary Jane James, the centre’s chief executive officer, said in an interview Tuesday that the change is due to less money from the province.

She said the centre gets $2.1 million in base funding per year but will no longer be getting the extra $1.8 million it had received each year over the last two years to reduce backlogs. It had hired more staff to bring wait lists down to three months from 18 months.

"'I've been advocating endlessly to say please don't do this because our wait list is going to crawl back up," James said.

"What (the province) communicated to me was that $1.8 million was not sustainable and they could not renew it and that clients would have to find another path forward."

The centre, which has operated since 1975, offers crisis support, counselling and legal support. Programs include counselling for children, women and the LGBTQ+ community. Last year, the centre helped roughly 20,000 people, including more than 4,000 calls to its crisis line.

The revenue loss means having to pause intakes and lay people off, James said. She said sex assault survivors, including those referred by private psychologists, won't have a place to go.

"I think we got caught up in the crossfires of funding cuts all over the place," James said.

"I get that, but this is $1.8 million, which I would guess in the budget is equivalent to a chocolate bar. I don't think it's a lot of money to provide these services to individuals who are really struggling."

A provincial spokesperson said the base budget funding hasn't changed but declined to comment on the centre’s concern about the extra funding not being renewed.

"We will continue to work with sexual assault centres, child advocacy centres and sexual violence agencies to ensure this funding goes where it is needed most," Children and Family Services press secretary Daniel Verrier said in an email.

Julia Hayter, the Opposition NDP women's status critic, said the funding cut by the United Conservative Party government is a "direct attack on the safety and dignity" of survivors.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 11, 2025.

Aaron Sousa, The Canadian Press