Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. budget has millions for addiction treatment

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Apr, 2021 10:13 PM
  • B.C. budget has millions for addiction treatment

British Columbia's finance minister says the government is making the largest investment in mental health and addictions in the province's history as part of Budget 2021.

Selina Robinson says the budget includes $500 million over three years to expand youth mental health programs, add 195 treatment and recovery beds for substance users and expand programs that respond to the overdose crisis.

That includes $330 million for treatment and recovery services for substance users, $152 million of which is dedicated to opioid treatment.

Robinson says emergency overdose prevention supports introduced during the pandemic will become permanent, such as the operation of new supervised consumption sites, Assertive Community Treatment teams and additional nursing supports.

The budget includes $75 million over three years to improve access to mental health services, including $53 million to expand early psychosis interventions, $14 million for the First Nations Health Authority and $8 million for eating disorder care and suicide prevention services.

In the five years since B.C. declared a public health emergency in the overdose crisis, more than 7,000 people have died, including record numbers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Forced isolation of the pandemic and disruption of illicit drug supply chains only made the problem worse with 1,176 illicit drug overdoses recorded in 2020.

The budget also targets support for children and youth with $97 million to quadruple the number of integrated child and youth support teams and expand other services like school-based programs.

"We are investing in our youth, so that small problems don't grow larger," Robinson says in her budget speech.

The funding for youth will also see the number of Foundry Centres across the province grow from 11 locations to 23 by 2024. The centres offer a one-stop shop for young people to access mental health care, substance use services, primary care, social services and peer support.

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe and provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said last week moves to decriminalize possession of drugs, increase safe drug supplies and provide recovery programs are important steps, but more must be done.

The mental health and addictions funding supports the province's 10-year Pathways to Hope strategy for care, Robinson says. The plan aims to move from a crisis-response approach to a system based on wellness promotion, prevention and early intervention.

"We are taking action to help end the tragedy playing out in communities around British Columbia," Robinson says. "Our plan meets the unprecedented need with a historic response."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

1506 new cases over 3 days

1506 new cases over 3 days
The province is targeting indoor religious gatherings by April. Details will come soon according to Dr. Henry.

1506 new cases over 3 days

AstraZeneca shots go to priority workers in B.C.

AstraZeneca shots go to priority workers in B.C.
They include sites where poultry, fruit and fish are processed as well as agricultural operations and large industrial camps where close living quarters make isolation and quarantine difficult, contributing to outbreaks.

AstraZeneca shots go to priority workers in B.C.

119 dogs surrendered from northern B.C. property

119 dogs surrendered from northern B.C. property
The dogs surrendered include terriers, Shih Tzus, papillons and other small-breed crosses that are being treated for an array of medical needs, from severely matted coats to dental, eye and nutrition issues.

119 dogs surrendered from northern B.C. property

Girls dies after school stabbing

Girls dies after school stabbing
Mounties say the girl was airlifted to hospital, where she died of her injuries, and her death is being investigated as a homicide.

Girls dies after school stabbing

Lawmakers call for criminal probe of MindGeek

Lawmakers call for criminal probe of MindGeek
The demand, spelled out in a letter Monday to RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki, comes two weeks after a similar request by more than 100 victims of exploitive content they say was posted to websites owned by MindGeek.

Lawmakers call for criminal probe of MindGeek

Judge in Meng case hears arguments on evidence

Judge in Meng case hears arguments on evidence
Meng is accused of misrepresenting Huawei's control over technology company Skycom in a presentation to HSBC, putting the bank at risk of violating U.S. sanctions against Iran.

Judge in Meng case hears arguments on evidence