New York Post

Thrive has big plan$, few details for kids

- By NOLAN HICKS and SELIM ALGAR

Mayor de Blasio and city First Lady Chirlane McCray rolled out a plan Monday for boosting counseling services for young people struggling during the pandemic — but included few details, such as a timeline or price tag.

The new measures — which will be run under the banner of the embattled ThriveNYC initiative — are set to be focused on 27 neighborho­ods hard hit by COVID-19 and will include giving public-school students a brief quiz to check on their mental health, and hiring up to 150 social workers.

De Blasio and McCray would not provide a price tag for the program and Hizzoner declined to say how it would be funded, other than to say the new effort would be a “budget priority.”

“What we are saying here is we will make it a budget priority to provide this support in the 27 neighborho­ods that were hardest hit by COVID,” he said when pressed on the funding details. “Whatever it takes, we’re going to make it a budget priority. Even if it means we have to reduce spending in other areas.”

The Big Apple faces a $3.8 billion budget shortfall next year, which has left Hizzoner banking on a significan­t injection of federal aid. However, the recently passed $900 billion federal stimu

lus package included little assistance for cities and states — and de Blasio has acknowledg­ed there is little hope for an injection of cash if Republican­s maintain control of the US Senate.

De Blasio and McCray spent much of the morning press conference touting the new mentalheal­th checks for students, which Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza described as a brief fiveminute quiz-like assessment.

Officials said the new check would be folded in with the citywide student assessment­s announced earlier this month to determine how much students have suffered from virtual learning, though there were few specific details about what public-school children would be asked or when the evaluation­s would be conducted.

“Think of these screenings as an expanded health checkup for students to learn how they are feeling, how they are getting along with friends and at home,” McCray told reporters during her husband’s daily press briefing.

De Blasio, McCray and other administra­tion officials billed the new program as part of the muchcritic­ized $1.2 billion ThriveNYC initiative, which the first lady has spearheade­d.

Political insiders speculated for years that Hizzoner put his wife in the high-profile position to boost her image in preparatio­n for a much-rumored bid for Brooklyn Borough president, which she eventually nixed in October.

ThriveNYC establishe­d a public-service campaign to promote mental-health awareness, paid for retraining portions of the city workforce to better handle emotionall­y distressed New Yorkers and set up a hotline to help connect New Yorkers to psychiatri­sts and other mental-health services.

Lawmakers, mental-health advocates and good-government groups roundly criticized the program in recent years for focusing its efforts on combating mild forms of mental illness like anxiety, instead of treating more severe forms of distress.

City Hall eventually accepted the critique and announced in March it was overhaulin­g the program to put more emphasis on disorders like bipolar and schizophre­nia.

 ??  ?? ARE YOU OK? Mayor de Blasio and First Lady Chirlane McCray won’t say how much mental-health checkups for public-school students will cost.
ARE YOU OK? Mayor de Blasio and First Lady Chirlane McCray won’t say how much mental-health checkups for public-school students will cost.
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