Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Getting $71.1M To Increase Access To Treatment For Substance Abuse

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Sep, 2018 01:05 PM
  • B.C. Getting $71.1M To Increase Access To Treatment For Substance Abuse
TORONTO — The province hardest hit by what health officials consider a national opioid crisis is receiving tens of millions of dollars to increase access to treatment for substance abuse.
 
 
The federal government says it is giving British Columbia $71.7 million as part of a bilateral agreement signed today.
 
 
The federal health minister, Ginette Petitpas Taylor, said the money was part of funding allocated in the 2018 federal budget.
 
 
Petitpas Taylor and B.C. Minister of Mental Health and Addictions Judy Darcy made the announcement at an opioid symposium in Toronto.
 
 
Earlier Thursday, the ministers participated in a panel with Bill Blair, the federal minister for organized crime reduction, Toronto Mayor John Tory and Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson.
 
 
More than 3,800 people died from opioids in Canada in 2017, compared to 2,978 in 2016, according to the latest figures published by Health Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

More Than One In Four Human Trafficking Victims In Canada Is Under 18

More Than One In Four Human Trafficking Victims In Canada Is Under 18
majority of human trafficking victims in Canada are women and girls younger than 25

More Than One In Four Human Trafficking Victims In Canada Is Under 18

BC Premier John Horgan Says ‘Gouging' To Blame For Higher Gas Prices, Not Taxes

BC Premier John Horgan Says ‘Gouging' To Blame For Higher Gas Prices, Not Taxes
Premier John Horgan says price gouging, not higher taxes, is responsible for skyrocketing gasoline prices in British Columbia.

BC Premier John Horgan Says ‘Gouging' To Blame For Higher Gas Prices, Not Taxes

OPP Rescue Child Locked In Hot Car In Temiskaming Shores, Ont.; Woman Charged

OPP Rescue Child Locked In Hot Car In Temiskaming Shores, Ont.; Woman Charged
Police say they received a call Wednesday afternoon reporting a small child locked in a vehicle in Temiskaming Shores, Ont.

OPP Rescue Child Locked In Hot Car In Temiskaming Shores, Ont.; Woman Charged

Retaliate Or Not? Canada's Tough Decision In The Event Of U.S. Tariffs

Retaliate Or Not? Canada's Tough Decision In The Event Of U.S. Tariffs
Industry leaders say the federal Liberal government will face a complex decision — with deep economic consequences — if the U.S. makes good on its threat to slap tariffs on Canadian-made cars and trucks.

Retaliate Or Not? Canada's Tough Decision In The Event Of U.S. Tariffs

Lions Player Jovan Olafioye Takes To Twitter For Help Navigating Vancouver's Housing Market

Lions Player Jovan Olafioye Takes To Twitter For Help Navigating Vancouver's Housing Market
Jovan Olafioye has made a career out of protecting CFL quarterbacks from some of the league's most fearsome pass-rushers, but this season, he felt like he was in danger of being sacked by Vancouver's notoriously tough housing market.

Lions Player Jovan Olafioye Takes To Twitter For Help Navigating Vancouver's Housing Market

Police Search For South Asian Driver Who Struck Mountie, Breaking His Arm In Burnaby

RCMP say a Mountie suffered a broken arm while attempting to stop a driver who was allegedly using an electronic device behind the wheel in Burnaby, B.C.

Police Search For South Asian Driver Who Struck Mountie, Breaking His Arm In Burnaby