Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Program To Help Troubled Military Veterans Find Work Gets $2.9m From Feds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2016 12:30 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government is contributing $2.9 million for a program to help veterans struggling with mental health problems to find jobs.
     
    The money is going to the Mood Disorders Society of Canada to help provide vets with skills training and support they need to find work.
     
    Veterans Affairs Minister Kent Hehr says his department will also contribute in-kind support to the project in the form of promotion, expertise and advice.
     
    The program will provide employment assistance services to vulnerable veterans suffering from conditions such as depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, or post-traumatic stress disorder.
     
    Participants will get employment placements or assistance to return to school.
     
    The program will bring the federal government, mental health organizations, stakeholder groups, homeless shelters and local employers together to roll out 48 programs, over a three-year period, in Calgary, Montreal and Toronto.
     
    The department says this will complement existing programs designed to help veterans make the transition to civilian life.
     
    "Living with mental health issues can be extremely difficult, not only for those who have them, but also for their loved ones," Hehr said in a statement.
     
    "This skills training and support project will make a real difference in the lives of the participants."
     
    Phil Upshall, national executive director of the Mood Disorders Society of Canada, said the idea is to help vets who have fallen between the cracks and need help.
     
    "The program will provide veterans, who have been struggling with employment barriers, with the personal and professional skills to transition into the new normal of living through skills development, employment and renewed community engagement," Upshall said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man In Wheelchair Struck, Killed By Train At New Brunswick Railway Crossing

    Man In Wheelchair Struck, Killed By Train At New Brunswick Railway Crossing
      RCMP Const. Derek Black said the man from Moncton was on the tracks at a crossing near Robinson and Victoria streets when he was hit by the train at 1:45 a.m.

    Man In Wheelchair Struck, Killed By Train At New Brunswick Railway Crossing

    Giant Hose Awaits Pumps To Move Vital Water Into Saskatchewan City

    Giant Hose Awaits Pumps To Move Vital Water Into Saskatchewan City
    The line — essentially a giant hose — runs about 30 kilometres to the South Saskatchewan River, but Jim Toye says pumps to move the water are not ready.

    Giant Hose Awaits Pumps To Move Vital Water Into Saskatchewan City

    Nanaimo RCMP Arrest Suspect Traced Through Uploaded Selfie On Stolen iPhone

    Nanaimo RCMP Arrest Suspect Traced Through Uploaded Selfie On Stolen iPhone
    The 39-year-old was arrested less than 48 hours after the selfie was circulated on social media.

    Nanaimo RCMP Arrest Suspect Traced Through Uploaded Selfie On Stolen iPhone

    Annual Review Off For Mentally Ill B.C. Father Who Killed His Three Children

    The province's Criminal Justice Branch says Allan Schoenborn consented to delaying this Thursday's hearing while B.C. Crown lawyers seek to have him designated a "high-risk" accused, tightening his restrictions for confinement.

    Annual Review Off For Mentally Ill B.C. Father Who Killed His Three Children

    Ontario Man Pleads Guilty To Theft For Trying To Cheat Others Out $7-Million Win

    Ontario Man Pleads Guilty To Theft For Trying To Cheat Others Out $7-Million Win
    Ontario Provincial Police say they began investigating a suspicious group Lotto 6/49 win in 2013.

    Ontario Man Pleads Guilty To Theft For Trying To Cheat Others Out $7-Million Win

    Immigrants Detained In Ontario Corrections Facilities Remain On Hunger Strike

    Immigrants Detained In Ontario Corrections Facilities Remain On Hunger Strike
    Approximately 50 men at the Toronto East Detention Centre and Central East Correctional Centre in Lindsay began refusing food on July 11, but an advocacy group says several have since decided to resume eating.

    Immigrants Detained In Ontario Corrections Facilities Remain On Hunger Strike