Medicine Hat News

Quebec invests $100M in mental health after sword attack

- MORGAN LOWRIE

MONTREAL

The Quebec government announced $100 million in funding for mental health services Monday following a fatal sword attack in Quebec City, even as the province’s premier and junior health minister warned that it’s impossible to fully eliminate the risk of such violent tragedies.

Junior health minister Lionel Carmant called the investment “unpreceden­ted” and said the announceme­nt was moved ahead in response to the Halloween night attack that killed two people and injured five. Police say a swordwield­ing suspect who had previously expressed violent desires wore a medieval costume as he attacked victims seemingly chosen at random.

Carmant said the money will be spent to improve access to therapy and to support institutio­ns, programs and community organizati­ons, with the aim of significan­tly cutting or eliminatin­g the province’s 16,000-person wait list to access mental health services by 2022.

He also announced the creation of a squad of 380 people who will go into the field to reach out to vulnerable individual­s, noting that half of people who suffer from mental illness do not seek treatment.

But Carmant said it’s impossible to say whether any one measure could have prevented Saturday night’s violence. “We want to improve our mental health services, we need to improve them, but zero risk doesn’t exist,” he said.

Earlier Monday, Premier Francois Legault said the Halloween stabbings raised “all kinds of questions” about mental illness, some of which can never be resolved.

“Even if we had all the services, even if we took charge of all the Quebecers who have mental health problems, we can never avoid all the violent tragedies,” Legault told a Montreal news conference, adding that only a small minority of people with mental illnesses become violent.

A 24-year-old man who police say travelled to the provincial capital from Montreal’s north shore has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder and five of attempted murder.

The attack in Quebec City’s historic neighbourh­ood prompted Mayor Regis Labeaume to call for a societal debate on mental health, which he described as the biggest security issue facing Canada’s major cities in the coming years.

Legault said he agreed with Labeaume’s statement that police officers are often being asked to function as social workers, and he said his government is considerin­g mixed patrols composed of officers and social service workers. “We see more and more, these two services have to work together,” he said.

Quebec City police chief Robert Pigeon said Sunday the attacker allegedly swung a katana-like sword at randomly chosen victims “with the clear intention of taking as many victims as possible.”

Pigeon said the suspect, Carl Girouard, had no known criminal record but he said that in an unspecifie­d “medical context” about five years ago, he shared plans to commit this type of act.

Mathieu Dufour, a forensic psychiatri­st at the Philippe-Pinel psychiatri­c hospital in Montreal, says that while he has no specific knowledge of the case, that statement as well as other elements point to possible mental health issues.

“The costume he was wearing, the type of weapon he had, the way he was found in hypothermi­a raised the question of whether he suffered from a mental disorder or not,” Dufour said, noting that sometimes people experienci­ng a psychiatri­c episode do not dress for the weather.

Dufour stressed that most people with mental illnesses are not violent and are more likely to be the victim of a crime than to commit one.

But he agreed the time is right for a “bigger debate” on funding for mental health services, which he said are increasing­ly needed as more Canadians struggle with anxiety and depression linked to the COVID-19 pandemic.

 ?? CP PHOTO JACQUES BOISSINOT ?? People attend a candle-lit vigil to honour Suzanne Clermont who was stabbed to death on Halloween night by a man with a sword in Quebec City. Clermont’s son, Julien Fortin, centre right, is comforted by family.
CP PHOTO JACQUES BOISSINOT People attend a candle-lit vigil to honour Suzanne Clermont who was stabbed to death on Halloween night by a man with a sword in Quebec City. Clermont’s son, Julien Fortin, centre right, is comforted by family.

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