Times Colonist

$4.7 million in donations heading to health-care programs for children

- CINDY E. HARNETT ceharnett@timescolon­ist.com • To donate to the fund, go to islandkids­first.com/donate-now

The Children’s Health Foundation of Vancouver Island announced Wednesday it has $4.7 million in donations to pour into health-care funding for kids.

The money, which the organizati­on’s CEO Veronica Carroll called “our biggest funding announceme­nt to date,” will flow to 50 groups with more than 80 projects on Vancouver Island.

The foundation receives and manages private donations to fund children’s health programs with Island Health serving as a key partner in the provision of these programs.

About three-quarters of the funding, announced at a news conference in Nanaimo, comes from a pool of continuous donors built up over the foundation’s 91-year history, Carroll said. The rest has been provided through active campaigns.

These funds allow children to access health care closer to home — part of the foundation’s commitment to make the Island a better place for them and their families. “We are really walking the talk about being an Island-wide organizati­on,” Carroll said. The 50 organizati­ons “are really representa­tive of every community across and around the Island.”

Those organizati­ons include: Queen Alexandra Centre for Children’s Health Programs in Victoria; Sooke Family Resource Centre’s prenatal program; a children’s health hub in Gold River providing medical services; a family support program in Campbell River; the Malahat First Nation, circle of courage boys program in the Cowichan Valley; Alberni Valley Community School Society’s rural and remote access to services institute; and outreach therapy for a Nu-chah-nulth program.

The foundation also launched its Island Kids First Fund campaign, with Coastal Community Credit Union making the first donation. The foundation’s goal is $2 million. It supports early childhood developmen­t, child and youth mental health and rural and remote access to health care.

Health-care hubs are viewed as essential to improving health outcomes for children in remote and other rural communitie­s such as Port Hardy, Ucluelet and Tofino. They provide a base for a variety of health-care profession­als including developmen­tal specialist­s, dentists and speech therapists.

“Kids are 22 per cent of the Island population but they are 100 per cent of our future,” Carroll said.

“We like to remind people to think about that because this is the kind of Island and community we are creating.”

The foundation pointed to Brian Miller’s family from Campbell River as an example of the benefits that can be achieved through the foundation’s programs. Miller’s daughter, Emma, 5, was born six weeks premature.

“There is no amount of thanks I can ever give to all the organizati­ons that have helped us through our journey since Emma’s birth,” Miller said.

“From our stay at Jeneece Place when she was born to all the support we have had from active and engaged health-care partners, we are forever grateful.”

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