“we’ve heard from indigenous service providers that they have seen a dramatic increase in demand for mental health and wellness support,” he said.
“this is a time of reckoning in british columbia and across canada. we must ensure as a government, as a society and as individual british columbians, that we stand with indigenous people and recognize the truth of our colonial system.”
groups receiving funding include the indian residential school survivors society, which will use it to enhance a round-the-clock support line, as well as the tsow-tun le lum society, so it can provide more in-person health and wellness.
metis nation bc, where trudeau is senior director of operations, will use $250,000 in funding for needs that are specific to metis survivors and their families, who will get 10 free counselling sessions.
trudeau said they will also be able to gather at a forum to focus on how their needs can be met as a population that has historically not been well understood as residential school survivors, along with first nations and inuit.
there’s not a large awareness of metis people in british columbia, including that they went to residential schools and were part of the sixties scoop, she said in an interview.