Winnipeg crisis intervention program gets a $400,000 boost - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipeg crisis intervention program gets a $400,000 boost

The Manitoba government announced it will provide $414,000 to expand the Alternative Response to Citizens in Crisis initiative, which sends mental health professionals and plainclothes police officers to help people in crisis situations.

The pilot initiative, which pairs up mental health professionals with police, will become permanent

A lady stands and speaks into a microphone in front of a blue background.
Manitoba Mental Health and Community Wellness Minister Janice Morley-Lecomte announces more than $400,000 in funding for the Alternative Response to Citizens in Crisis project. (Bert Savard/CBC)

A project that pairs mental health professionals with police to help people in crisis will be expanded thanks to more than $400,000 in funding from the provincialgovernment.

The spendingcomes after the project, which started as a pilot in 2021, met with success. About 82 per cent of 882 incidents were resolved through theAlternative Response to Citizens in Crisisprogram.

"People are getting the appropriate, person-centered and co-ordinated response they need in the community," Erika Hunzinger, Winnipeg's Crisis Response Centre manager, saidduring a news conference announcing the funding onFriday.

The $414,000 in fundingmeans ARCC, which started as a pilot betweenthe Winnipeg Police Service and Shared Health's Crisis Response Centre,will go from five days a week to seven days and transition from a pilot to an ongoing mental health intervention response.

The program pairs mental health professionals with plainclothes police officers and sends them to non-criminal, non-emergent crisis situations.

It provides supports to individuals experiencing suicidal ideation, postpartum depression, psycho-social crisis and behavioural concerns that don't pose a safety risk to others, MentalHealthMinister Janice Morely-Lecomtesaid.

Chris Summerville, CEO of Schizophrenia Society of Canada, said having a mental health professional present can de-escalate situations.

"Sometimes just having someone who comes alongside and listens and knows how to listen" makes a difference, he said.

Itcan also be less traumatic for the person in a mental health crisis and for friends or family members, Summerville added.

"The results are so positive and very stirring actually."

Emergency resources

Morely-Lecomtesaid the program offers crucial assistance and helps ensureemergency services are used efficiently.

"Non-criminal and non-urgent mental-health related dispatch calls for the police service continue to rise in Winnipeg," Morely-Lecomte said. "Emergency situations can be traumatic for individuals and can result in an unnecessary trip to an emergency department, adding to patient volumes and tying up police resources for multiple hours."

During the pilot period, ARCC was involved in 882 police events involving 530 individuals,Morley-Lecomte said.And in 91 per cent of cases, individuals involved in the program were able to remain in the community while receiving care.

A statement from Shared Health saidtherewas a 29 per cent reduction in police presentations to hospital emergency departments for mental health-related issues, from 1,005 in 2021 to 714 in 2022.

Morley-Lecomte said the initiative will contribute to the province's commitment to a co-ordinated strategy for suicide prevention.

"Increasing access to mental health supports and services to individuals in crisis is integral to my department's plan moving forward," Morley-Lemcote said.

Hunzinger said ARCChas made the use ofhealth and police resources more efficient while also helpingindividuals in crisis.

Winnipeg crisis intervention program gets a $400,000 boost

1 year ago
Duration 1:51
A project that pairs mental health professionals with police to help people in crisis will be expanded thanks to more than $400,000 in funding from the provincial government. The spending comes after the project, which started as a pilot in 2021, met with success. About 82 per cent of 882 incidents were resolved through the Alternative Response to Citizens in Crisis program.