New York Daily News

$4.6M plan to open 7 centers

- BY BEN CHAPMAN John Annese

THE CITY IS kicking off a fresh, $4.6 million effort for added mental health services for city kids younger than 6 and their families, de Blasio administra­tion officials said Wednesday.

Beginning in October, the city’s Early Childhood Mental Health Network will operate at seven new clinics across all five boroughs.

Services available at the clinics will include short-term counseling and onsite mental health consultati­ons.

City First Lady Chirlane McCray said the network fits into the administra­tion’s larger, ThriveNYC project to boost mental health across the city.

“Everyone will face hardship. That is a part of life,” McCray said. “By acting early to help our youngest New Yorkers understand and manage their emotions, we can better equip them to handle stress, prevent or lessen the severity of future mental health challenges, and set them up for success. It is easier to grow a healthy child than to mend a broken adult.”

Under the program, staffers at nearly 400 prekinderg­arten and day care sites will get added training and classroom materials to support kids’ mental health.

Staffers at the pre-K and day care sites will also be able to refer kids to the seven Mental Health Network clinics, where those kids will have priority for services.

More than 3,000 kids and their families are expected to take part at first in the project that eventually aims to give mental health services to any of the city’s 100,000 universal pre-K students and city day care users who might need them.

The locations of the clinics are still to be determined, but there will be two in Bronx, two in Brooklyn and one each in the other three boroughs.

The city schools have also invested $47 million in programs to improve school climate and boost students’ mental health under the de Blasio administra­tion.

Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña said pre-K staffers will be better equipped to help students build strong foundation­s for success in school and life thanks to the training they will receive under the Mental Health Network.

“Teachers and school administra­tors play an important role in nurturing a child’s social and emotional growth,” Fariña said. A DEAD whale surfaced in the Hudson River off New Jersey on Wednesday.

The badly mangled creature, possibly a 30-foot fin whale, was photograph­ed Wednesday night by NBC 4 New York’s news chopper.

The carcass was first seen in Newark Bay at 5 p.m. Monday, after it detached from the Cuckoo Hunter, a nearly 40,000-ton container ship it got stuck on, said Coast Guard operations specialist Michelle Krupa. The Army Corps of Engineers planned to remove the whale.

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