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Province provides funding for CMHA s Weyburn branch

Province announces funding for Canadian Mental Health Association facility upgrades

Saskatchewan is providing $340,000 in funding to key community partners to help improve services for residents who need mental health support. Three Saskatchewan branch offices of the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) will receive one-time payments from the Saskatchewan Health Authority for facility and equipment upgrades.  These investments will play an essential role in providing better mental health supports for those in need. It is vitally important that key community organizations are well equipped to provide mental health services to residents, Mental Health and Addictions, Seniors and Rural and Remote Health Minister Everett Hindley said.  People seeking mental health support deserve to feel confident in the safety and reliability of services and programs they are accessing.

Recent mental health funding includes Prince Albert CMHA branch

The Saskatchewan government has announced new funding for three Canadian Mental Health Association branches across the province including Prince Albert. A total of $340,000 is being allocated as “one-time payments from the Saskatchewan Health Authority for facility and equipment upgrades,” stated the media release. The Prince Albert branch will be receiving $100,000 with the Swift Current branch receiving $200,000 and the Weyburn branch receiving $40,000. “It is vitally important that key community organizations are well equipped to provide mental health services to residents,” Mental Health and Addictions, Seniors and Rural and Remote Health Minister Everett Hindley said in the press release. “People seeking mental health support deserve to feel confident in the safety and reliability of services and programs they are accessing.”

Saskatchewan making progresson suicide prevention work

The Government of Saskatchewan is providing an update on suicide prevention initiatives across the province to mark the one-year anniversary of the release of  Pillars for Life: The Saskatchewan Suicide Prevention Plan.  This plan focuses on efforts to support individuals and families at risk of suicide. The loss of one life to suicide is too many, Mental Health and Addictions, Seniors and Rural and Remote Health Minister Everett Hindley said.  We continue to work closely with our partners on the priorities in the  Pillars for Life plan.  I am pleased to provide an update on what has been accomplished and where we re focusing this year.

Mandryk: Gov t must listen to Northerners after suicide prevention bill

Article content We all owe New Democrat Cumberland MLA Doyle Vermette a debt of gratitude for restoring some humanity to the Saskatchewan legislature and the province after a whole lot of humanity on a critical issue was somehow lost. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Mandryk: Government must listen to northern residents after passage of suicide prevention bill Back to video That the Saskatchewan Party government would have embarrassed itself by rejecting an identical version of Vermette’s bill last June was at best a testimonial of how woefully uninformed our government was on this matter. At worst, it was a testimonial to how politics far too often takes precedence.

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