British Columbia

Civilian-led mental health crisis teams expand into Kamloops, Prince George and Comox Valley

The Peer Assisted Care Team model aims to replace police and sirens with mental health workers when responding to crises.

Peer Assisted Care Team model aims to replace police and sirens with mental health workers

A man and woman talk
Sean Daoust, a peer support worker with PACT, speaks to North Shore residents at Lynn Valley Library to raise awareness of the presence of B.C.’s first civilian-led crisis team in the region. (Mahshid Hadi/CBC)

A new model for responding to mental health calls in B.C. is expanding into Prince George, Kamloops and the Comox Valley.

The B.C. government announced Friday that those three communities are joining their Peer Assisted Care Team project, alongside programs already established in Victoria, the North Shore and New West Minster.

The program, referred to by the acronym PACT, sees a mental health worker and a peer support worker dispatched alongside police to mental health calls in an effort to provide support and counselling.

"When people are in crisis because of mental health challenges, we want them met with care and compassion," said Jennifer Whiteside, minister of Mental Health and Addictions in a written announcement.

The Canadian Mental Health Association will help lead the programs, with local operators for the three new communities to be selected later this year.

The province has committed $10 million to fund 10 teams in B.C. municipalities and two in First Nations communities and says it is in the process of selecting the remaining communities to be involved in the program.

270 calls in first six months for first PACT program

The first PACT response team launched on the North Shore in November 2022.

In the first six months of operation, the team responded to over 270 calls said Sean Daoust, a PACT peer support worker with the Canadian Mental Health Association North and West Vancouver branch.

A B.C. government graphic explaining the Peer Assisted Care Team model.
A B.C. government graphic explaining the Peer Assisted Care Team model. (Canadian Mental Health Association/Government of B.C.)

The program operates by establishing a separate telephone number for people experiencing a mental health crisis to call rather than 911. Then, instead of a police car with sirens being dispatched, a mental health worker and peer support worker are accompanied by law enforcement to provide discreet support for the person or people in need.

"Knowing that if I'm in a crisis situation, I don't need to rush to emergency. I don't need to call 911. That there is another option and that a care team can come de-escalate the situation, get me through that day and then find what I need going forward," Doust said in an interview with CBC News in May.

With files from Isabelle Raghem