Lionel Desmond inquiry: N.S. opposition wants transparency on government progress

A document of the report and recommendations by judge Paul Scovil on the Desmond Fatality Inquiry is photographed at the courthouse in Port Hawkesbury, N.S., Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

HALIFAX - Opposition parties say government owes it to Nova Scotians to be more transparent on its progress in implementing recommendations from an inquiry into a former soldier who killed his family and himself in 2017.

They made the comments Tuesday after a veterans affairs committee meeting that looked into the government's progress following the inquiry into the Lionel Desmond tragedy. In January 2024, the inquiry issued 25 recommendations including for the province to improve health access for Black Nova Scotians and ramp up funding to address intimate-partner violence.

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