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Burnout, turnover wracking Canada’s shelters in ‘Feminist Brain Drain’

Underfunding driving crisis in in women’s shelters across the country, new report finds
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Robyn Hoogendam of Women’s Shelters Canada speaks in Ottawa in a Nov. 9, 2022 handout photo. A new report says staff at women’s shelters and transition homes across the country are feeling burned out, underpaid and overburdened with administrative work. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Kaitlin Geiger-Bardswich

Sparse, inadequate funding is driving a burnout crisis among staff at women’s shelters and transition homes across the country, says a report released Thursday by a national non-profit.

The “Feminist Brain Drain” report from Women’s Shelters Canada surveyed more than 300 shelter and transition house employees across the country. It shows shelters coping with high rates of staff turnover and overwhelming workloads while trying to maintain a patchwork of revenues from governments and donations.

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