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The VS-LC model was first
launched in 1987 as a pilot project in three areas of the
province of Ontario. The objective of the project was to
identify the optimum delivery model for victim services. The
community-based victim
services
pilot project was so successful in
Brant, Frontenac and Sault Ste. Marie that a fourth
site, Metropolitan Toronto, became operational in 1989. Each
year, new VS-LC sites have been selected; strategically and
geographically located to ensure coverage throughout the
province.
In 1989, an independent
evaluation of the VS-LC projects concluded that victims, police
officers, community agencies and volunteers themselves were in
agreement that the provision of immediate assistance and timely
appropriate referral did help to reduce trauma and enhance
recovery from the effects of victimization.
The 1987 pilot project
highlighted a number of benefits for the victim, the community
and the police. For the victim, the benefits are derived out of
early assistance to help mitigate the potential for lasting
negative impact of a traumatic event, while promoting recovery
and increasing the individual’s potential as a witness in the
judicial process. The benefits for members of the community
include the opportunity to learn about the justice system, and
to become involved in direct service to people in the community.
In accordance with the
Victims’ Bill Of Rights 1995,
proclaimed in law on June 11, 1996, the needs and rights of
victims of crime are supported and recognized. The right to
victim services is thus established in law, and is a legislated
police responsibility.

The Perth Courier September 10, 2010:
Serious injuries. A
72-year-old Ottawa man sustained serious,
life-threatening injuries in this single-vehicle
crash that happened in Lanark Highlands on Sept. 8.
Laura Mueller
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