Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

BC Municipalities Funded For Local Overdose Actions

Darpan News Desk, 09 Mar, 2020 08:34 PM

    Communities throughout B.C. are increasing their efforts to address the overdose crisis with more than $900,000 in grants awarded to municipalities for local community wellness, safety and harm-reduction projects.


    Twenty-four municipalities and their community partners have received up to $50,000 in funding for initiatives that build on community wellness, safety and harm-reduction efforts related to the overdose crisis and saving lives. The opportunity was first announced by Judy Darcy, Minister of Mental Health and Addictions, at the Union of BC Municipalities convention in September 2019.


    “Everyone deserves to live in a healthy and safe community,” Darcy said. “We know that when people come together to identify challenges and solutions, we can create vibrant communities that put residents’ wellness first.”


    Funded projects include:

    a business engagement and ambassador project in Abbotsford;

    a needle recovery program in Vancouver;

    youth harm reduction and wellness efforts in Port Alberni;

    a drop-in harm reduction and meal program in Houston; and

    an employment program in Penticton and Kelowna.


    Additional projects aim to reduce stigma, while engaging and empowering people with lived and living experience of substance use.


    The one-time grants are supported by the Community Crisis Innovation Fund through the Ministry of Health and will be administered by the Community Action Initiative.


    This funding is part of a comprehensive investment of $746 million since Budget Update 2017 (through to 2023) aimed at harm reduction, prevention, enforcement, treatment and recovery initiatives.


    Escalating B.C.’s response to the overdose crisis is a pillar of government’s actions, as outlined in A Pathway to Hope — B.C.’s roadmap for making the system of mental health and addictions care better for people. 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

    Halifax Council Studies Quiet Fireworks Displays To Avoid Alarming Veterans

    Halifax Council Studies Quiet Fireworks Displays To Avoid Alarming Veterans
     A Nova Scotia city councillor is pushing for quiet fireworks in Halifax out of concern the noise is alarming veterans and people on the autism spectrum.

    Halifax Council Studies Quiet Fireworks Displays To Avoid Alarming Veterans

    Acquittal Quashed: Homeowner Who Gunned Down Car Thief To Be Tried Anew

    TORONTO - A homeowner who gunned down a would-be car thief seconds after a driveway confrontation will again have to stand trial on second-degree murder, Ontario's top court ruled on Wednesday.

    Acquittal Quashed: Homeowner Who Gunned Down Car Thief To Be Tried Anew

    Prepare For New Coronavirus Like An Emergency, Health Minister Advises

    OTTAWA - Health Minister Patty Hajdu is encouraging Canadians to stockpile food and medication in their homes in case they or a loved one falls ill with the novel coronavirus.    

    Prepare For New Coronavirus Like An Emergency, Health Minister Advises

    Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran

    Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran
    TORONTO - A woman in her 60s who recently travelled to Iran has become the fifth person to contract the novel coronavirus in Ontario, as the province's monitoring of the virus widens.

    Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran

    Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions

    Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions
    Bill C-7, introduced Monday, would remove a provision in the four-year-old assisted dying law that restricted the procedure to those whose natural death is "reasonably foreseeable" — a restriction that was struck down as unconstitutional by a Quebec court last fall.

    Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions

    Trudeau Uses Speech To Pitch African Envoys For UN Security Council Seat

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has taken Canada's campaign for a seat on the United Nations Security Council directly to African diplomats with a speech that tried to emphasize his boyhood connection to the continent.    

    Trudeau Uses Speech To Pitch African Envoys For UN Security Council Seat