Inquiry into missing, murdered women makes N.S. ‘visits’ as it seeks fresh start
HALIFAX — The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls is making “community visits” in Nova Scotia this week, as it seeks to put a crisis of confidence behind it.
The inquiry’s director of health, Terrellyn Fearn, said officials begin three days in Halifax on Tuesday, before moving on to Membertou and Millbrook First Nations.
“We’ve talked to family and survivors on what kind of process they would like, and this is the process they felt most comfortable with, and that’s what we implemented,” she said Monday.
The visits are being held to prepare for nine community hearings starting this fall across the country, Fearn said.


