NDP’s Suicide Prevention Bill passes after third attempt
Ever since 2018, Doyle Vermette has been fighting for families who have lost loved ones to suicide by trying to get The Saskatchewan Strategy for Suicide Prevention Act passed in the province’s legislature. It’s taken four years and three different attempts, but on Friday that fight is over as the bill has passed.
When he found out the bill was passed, Vermette, the NDP Opposition Critic for Mental Health and Addictions, immediately thought about all the people that he’s met over the years that have been affected by suicide.
“I am overwhelmed and very emotional for the families that have suffered the loss. The families, when I’ve met them and seen them, they didn’t want to give up and I wasn’t going to give up,” Vermette said. “Sometimes you go up there in time and you wonder, but they said ‘let’s do it’ and I said ‘let’s do it.’ My colleagues were supportive of it, so we introduced it again. And here today, we have an important piece of legislation that I really feel will bring and give hope to so many.”
Vermette believed a big reason why the prevention act went through this year was due to all the pressure that was put on the government by constituents.