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NY Allocates $2M in Suicide Prevention Funds for Veterans, First Responders

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New York is making up to $2 million available to expand resiliency and suicide prevention efforts among military veterans and uniformed personnel, including law enforcement, firefighters, emergency medical service personnel, corrections officers, and emergency dispatchers. Administered through the New York Office of Mental Health’s Suicide Prevention Center of New York, the CARES UP initiative provides funding for agencies and organizations to increase suicide prevention efforts and wellness programming among their ranks.

“Our service members and first responders encounter a tremendous amount of trauma and stress on the job, and that can take its toll on their mental wellbeing,” Governor Kathy Hochul said. “Funding through the CARES UP initiative is helping organizations and agencies across the State to incorporate resilience and mental wellness into their programming, ensuring these individuals can access the help and support they so rightfully deserve and need.”

The CARES UP program provides $30,000, for each discipline, annually over two years to increase suicide prevention efforts and wellness programming in their agencies.

First responder agencies work closely with the Suicide Prevention Center to receive training from national subject matter experts on topics such as resiliency, mental health and wellness, suicide prevention and peer support and implement agency-specific actions to address their unique needs. Examples include purchasing mental health or wellness apps for their staff and families, hosting wellness training, and expanding internal peer support resources.

The initiative also provides these grants to support veterans’ organizations via Onward Ops. Recipient organizations use the funding to promote social welfare of service members transitioning back to their communities after their tour of duty ends.

The first cohort of CARES UP awards were issued in 2022. Last year, CARES UP launched a second cohort, providing funding to 15 organizations – including three EMS squads, five law enforcement agencies, a fire department, and a corrections department – and three organizations serving veterans.

Studies have shown the cumulative stress and trauma are common in uniformed personnel professions and have placed these individuals at greater risk of suicide. First responders were more likely to die by suicide than in the line of duty, according to one recent study.

Likewise, New York veterans die by suicide at a rate nearly two times higher than civilians –a rate that has remained relatively unchanged since 2012. Veterans under the age of 55 consistently experience the highest rates of suicide in New York.

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