![Woman who filed workplace complaint against Manitoba's top First Nations chief goes public](https://www.ctvnews.ca/content/dam/ctvnews/en/images/2022/6/9/shauna-fontaine-1-5940674-1654813609241.jpeg)
Woman who filed workplace complaint against Manitoba's top First Nations chief goes public
CTV
A woman who filed a complaint against Manitoba’s top First Nations chief has made her name public.
A woman who filed a complaint against Manitoba’s top First Nations chief has made her name public.
Shauna Fontaine took to social media after an open letter was sent to the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs (AMC) calling on the organization to launch an inquiry into the conduct of Grand Chief Arlen Dumas.
Dumas was suspended in March pending a workplace investigation launched by the AMC following the complaint by Fontaine, who is a senior staff member with the organization.
Fontaine said in a Facebook post on Wednesday she wants the AMC to be more supportive of victims after advocates called on the organization to launch a more fulsome inquiry into Dumas’s conduct.
Fontaine, a member of Sagkeeng First Nation, identified herself as the woman who filed a workplace complaint in March against Dumas.
Fontaine, who was unavailable for an interview Thursday, alleges she was harassed, sexualized and assaulted by Dumas and has lived in fear of losing her job for bringing forward her concerns to the AMC where both she and Dumas work.
“I was victimized by this man, a person in power, a protected man,” Fontaine said on Facebook. “In my heart, speaking out was and will always be the right thing to do.”