in short, he told them so.
yet eby, never one to admit mistakes, insists that the government is merely acting “to ensure that we’re able to deliver in the toxic drug crisis,” by putting mental health and addictions back in the ministry of health where — might as well admit it — it belongs.
the grand experiment is over, but not without costs.
by the time mental health and addictions wraps up operations at the march 31, 2025, end of the fiscal year, it will have spent a seven-year total of $140 million.
more than $90 million, about two thirds of the total budget, went to wages and benefits for staff. the ministry was small but there was nothing modest about its staffing. at the top end are a half dozen executives making more than $1 million combined.
a further $20 million of the total budget went to advertising, consultants, overhead, and the like.
only $30 million was spent on grants to outside organizations related to mental health and addictions, the very purpose that the ministry was established to serve. mindful of that imbalance, rob shaw of chek news dubbed mental health and addictions “the ministry of air” a few years ago.
i’ll leave it to advocates to suggest how the remainder of the ministry’s $140 million budget could have been spent to improve the lot of people addicted to drugs or with a mental illness.