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The third annual Shelter Voices report from the Canadian Network of Women’s Shelters and Transition Houses was released Thursday. Here are some numbers about the state of domestic violence shelters in the country:

111: Women and children admitted to 234 shelters in one day last year

305: Women and children turned away from those shelters on the same day because of capacity issues

148: Women in shelters in one day last year who were pregnant

44: Percentage of shelters that took in a woman from another province in the last month

84: Percentage of shelters that took in a woman from another province in the last year

76: Percentage of shelters that relied on food donations to feed residents.

$89.9 million: Amount, over two years, the federal budget has pledged to renovate and build new domestic violence shelters

3,000: Spaces that will be built or renovated as a result.

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The report says that on one day last year, 234 shelters had to turn away 305 women and children — almost three-quarters of the women and children seeking shelter that day — because there was no space.

“The number of women being turned away is way beyond acceptable,” said Lise Martin, the network’s executive director.

Martin said the findings reinforce the need for a national action plan on violence against women to ensure there are comparable levels of service across provinces and territories.