Monday, April 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Government Gives $8.8M In Student Mental Health, Substance Use Help

Darpan News Desk, 05 Sep, 2019 06:51 PM
  • B.C. Government Gives $8.8M In Student Mental Health, Substance Use Help

To help make mental health and wellness front and centre for students, parents and educators, B.C. schools will now have access to enhanced wellness supports and programs with $8.87 million being invested over the next three years.


“Students need a safe place to say, ‘I’m not ok’, whether they’re struggling with anxiety or depression or any mental health issue,” said Judy Darcy, Minister of Mental Health and Addictions. “This investment will help provide students, parents and educators with the tools they need to support mental well-being for students across B.C. for years to come.”


Darcy and Rob Fleming, Minister of Education, made the announcement surrounded by students, families and teachers at Esquimalt High school.


Funding will be used to provide individual grants to all 60 school districts, as well as independent schools, to help them better support mental health for all children and for those with substance-use challenges. Grants can be used for different programs and supports, such as staff training, student workshops, family information nights or to develop new resource materials for educators and families.


“We know there is a gap in student success for those who struggle with mental health challenges in B.C.,” Fleming said. “With this funding, we want to ensure all students – no matter where they live or the size of their school – are able to get the quality help they need, when they need it.”


School districts and independent schools are asked to focus on initiatives related to mental health literacy, programs and supports that recognize and respond to the effects of all types of trauma, as well as social and emotional learning. School districts will work with their Indigenous partners in the planning of all activities to ensure they are culturally safe and meet the needs of Indigenous youth.


Funding will also be used to support the professional development of educators to help teachers and school districts develop a co-ordinated and consistent approach to mental health in schools throughout the province. This will include engagement with school leadership organizations, partner organizations, families and students.


Funding will also support the 2020 School Community Mental Health Conference. This third-annual conference will, once again, bring together approximately 500 representatives of B.C. public, independent and First Nations schools, police, health authorities, and child and youth mental health workers, who are focused on improving mental health and addictions services for all B.C. students.


Improving mental health in schools is an integral part of government’s actions outlined in A Pathway to Hope, B.C.’s roadmap for making the system of mental health and addictions care better for people by providing safe, quality supportive recovery services, no matter where a person lives in B.C. Implementing A Pathway to Hope is a shared priority with the BC Green Party caucus and is part of the Confidence and Supply Agreement.

MORE National ARTICLES

New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash

New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash
Police in New Brunswick say they're considering charges against a 28-year-old student after the car he was driving crashed, resulting in the deaths of three young men in the back seat.

New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash

Federal NDP Choose 'In It For You' As Slogan

The federal New Democrats have settled on "In it for You" as their English slogan for the upcoming federal election campaign.

Federal NDP Choose 'In It For You' As Slogan

Barenaked Ladies Musician Awarded $60,000 In Legal Battle Over Painting

A Toronto gallery must now pay tens of thousands of dollars to a Canadian musician who alleged he was sold a fake painting purported to be by the renowned Indigenous artist Norval Morrisseau.

Barenaked Ladies Musician Awarded $60,000 In Legal Battle Over Painting

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole
A British Columbia mother found guilty of the second-degree murder of her eight-year-old daughter has been sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole for 15 years.

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole

Driving Home The ‘Back To School’ Message

Driving Home The ‘Back To School’ Message
On September 3, 2019, students across the Surrey School District will be starting a new year of study and the aim of the Surrey RCMP Traffic Enforcement Unit is to ensure those students are safe while they travel to and from school.

Driving Home The ‘Back To School’ Message

Abbotsford Police Seek Driver And Pedestrian Witnesses Of Fatal Collision

Specifically, police are seeking to speak to the driver of the van pictured below.    

Abbotsford Police Seek Driver And Pedestrian Witnesses Of Fatal Collision