Ontario Expanding Mobile Crisis Response Teams in Eastern Ontario
Over $515,000 investment for additional mental health and addictions crisis workers
March 18, 2022
BROCKVILLE – The Ontario government is improving public safety and supports for people in crisis by investing more than $515,000 over two years to expand Mobile Crisis Response Teams. The Lennox & Addington OPP Detachment will receive $142,184.06, Lanark County OPP Detachment will receive $111,802.92, the Frontenac OPP Detachment will receive $120,750.00, and Smith Falls Police Service will receive $141,252.00 in grant funding to increase their capacity to respond to calls from individuals experiencing a mental health or addictions crisis. The investment will enable police services to add mental health and addictions crisis workers to existing Mobile Crisis Response Teams and help ensure these specialized resources are available where and when needed.
“Our government continues to support police services as they deliver critical services on the ground,” said Steve Clark, MPP for Leeds—Grenville—Thousand Islands and Rideau Lakes. “This new grant program will expand the OPP’s ability to deliver appropriate services and underlines our government’s commitment to public safety.”
Mobile Crisis Response Teams consist of police officers and crisis workers working together to respond to complex situations where mental health or addictions may be a factor. Supported by the police, crisis workers determine whether an individual in crisis should be sent to an emergency department for treatment and are equipped to provide connections to community programming and supports to address an individual’s physical and mental well-being over the longer term.
The Mobile Crisis Response Teams Enhancement Grant is part of Ontario’s Roadmap to Wellness to build Ontario’s mental health and addictions system and complements the government’s earlier commitments to protect people’s health and enhance mobile crisis intervention teams across the province to help build a province where all people feel safe and protected.
QUICK FACTS
- All municipal and First Nations police services, as well as the OPP were eligible to apply for funding.
- Maximum funding for each project is $120,000 per fiscal year for a total of $240,000 over two years. However, additional funding may be granted pending considerations such as geography and local service system features that impact service delivery costs.
- Police services are required to track and collect provincially identified outcomes as well as identify their own local performance measures based on their projects.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
MEDIA CONTACT
Erin Merkley
Constituency Assistant
erin.merkley@pc.ola.org