Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette is open to reviewing the IVAC regime

The Minister of Justice, Simon Jolin-Barrette, said Thursday he was open to correcting certain gaps in the compensation system for victims of criminal acts (IVAC). He also committed to meeting with victims who are deeply outraged by this new law.

“Most certainly, I will meet them,” he attested to the Salon bleu.

In the morning,The duty recounted the anger of two mothers of murdered children and a man tortured by his father. Amélie Lemieux, Émilie Arsenault and Guillaume Gosselin are all three affected by a reform of the IVAC carried out in 2021. This notably puts an end to the assistance offered to victims after three years, which is currently causing a shock wave in people who have suffered criminal acts. The assistance offered to these victims comes from a fund which accumulates surpluses, year after year.

“It shocks me, because not so long ago, [en 2021], we were studying the reform of the IVAC. I was in front of Minister Jolin-Barrette, and we told him precisely what was going to happen. We told him that it was not possible to set a deadline for the recovery of the victims, that it would create distress,” said MP Christine Labrie, of Québec solidaire.

She led the charge at the Salon Bleu, demanding that the minister meet with the victims, as they had requested. “By reading the article in Duty, most certainly, this morning my staff is already contacting Mme Lemieux, Mme Arsenault,” replied Mr. Jolin-Barrette. He then committed to meeting the victims. To his left, the Prime Minister, François Legault, nodded while listening to the minister.

Mr. Jolin-Barrette recalled that his reform had put an end to life annuities (compensation for life) in favor of temporary aid which reaches more victims.

“ [La rente viagère] meant that we could not compensate many people. We have made a choice to increase the number of victims who can benefit from IVAC,” he explained.

Discretionary power?

Facing him, Mme Labrie asked Mr. Jolin-Barrette to do more than “explain [aux victimes] a state of affairs that they already know.” She demanded “solutions”, “flexibility”, and recalled that she had proposed to the minister to give himself discretionary power, to extend the duration of certain compensation for example.

In response, Simon Jolin-Barrette said he was “open to looking at all the different solutions available to us”. However, he expressed reservations about discretionary power, arguing that it “is not necessarily always appropriate.”

In an exchange with THE Duty, he then said he intended to “study the question” and the “different issues” raised by the victims. “Most certainly, we are very sensitive to the situation experienced,” he assured.

Already on February 8, the three opposition parties had pressed Minister Jolin-Barrette to review his reform. On Thursday, Liberal MP Jennifer Maccarone proposed returning to work in a cross-partisan manner. “We are ready tomorrow morning to come back to continue the work, to continue investigating,” she said. “It’s clear, these are people who are abandoned. We have a continuation of our work to do here, in the Assembly, and we should do this work in a transpartisan manner, as we have done in the past. »

MP Pascal Paradis, of the Parti Québécois, for his part declared that the government had wanted to modify a plan which provided for the long-term payment of small amounts to grant more substantial financial assistance to victims. That said, “a government that listens, a government that really wants the best public policies, it must look at the effect of public policies,” he added. “What I mean is that I recognize that there was some of the intentions that were good. Today, we arrive at a pivotal moment and we realize that it may have effects contrary to those we had envisaged. »

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