Tester Announces More Than $2 Million for Montana Organizations to End Veteran Suicide

First-of-its-kind program created by Chairman’s Hannon Act provides VA funding for community suicide prevention programs;

Tester secured funding to help Montana organizations tackle veterans suicide in the 2024 government funding bill

Following his sustained efforts, U.S. Senator Jon Tester today announced $2.15 million in grant funding for Montana organizations working to end veteran suicide. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) awarded these funds under the Staff Sergeant Parker Gordon Fox Suicide Prevention Grant Program, a first-of-its-kind program created under the Senator’s landmark Commander John Scott Hannon Veterans Mental Health Care Improvement Act (Hannon Act) to provide federal funding for local suicide prevention programs.

“Mental health is one of the biggest issues facing our country, our state, and our veterans, and it takes all hands-on-deck to prevent veterans from slipping through the cracks,” said Tester, Chairman of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee. “These community-based programs are critical in our fight to end veteran suicide, and I’m proud to have championed this grant that will help Montana suicide prevention groups connect our veterans with the life-saving services and resources they need closer to home.” 

Tester secured funding for the following organizations providing veterans suicide prevention services across Montana:

  • $750,000 for Volunteers of America Northern Rockies, a statewide organization serving all counties in Montana
  • $750,000 for Adaptive Performance Center in Billings and Helena
  • $650,000 for the Great Plains Veterans Service Center based out of Rocky Boy’s Indian Reservation

As a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Tester secured $52.5 million in funding for this veteran suicide prevention grant program through the Fiscal Year 2024 government funding bill, and organizations were able to apply for up to $750,000 in grants, which are renewable on an annual basis by application. Under this grant program, he also secured $2.15 million in funding for organizations providing veterans suicide prevention services across Montana in 2022 and 2023.  

Named for a Montana veteran who lost his life to suicide, Tester championed the Hannon Act in his capacity as the top Democrat on the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee to bolster VA’s mental health workforce and increase rural veterans’ access to care through alternative and local treatment options. Among its many provisions, the law established the Staff Sergeant Parker Gordon Fox Suicide Prevention Grant Program, a three-year community-based grant program to deliver financial assistance to organizations that provide or coordinate suicide prevention services for at-risk veterans and their families.

“Volunteers of America Northern Rockies continues to be grateful for Senator Tester’s commitment to our nation’s Veterans, his leadership as Chairman of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, and his efforts to secure critical funding for the Staff Sergeant Parker Gordon Fox Suicide Prevention Grant,” said Volunteers of America Northern Rockies Chief Executive Officer Jeff Holsinger. “The Senator’s hard work has and will continue to have a powerful impact to support suicide prevention among Veterans in Montana and throughout our great Nation.”

“In the past two years, we have been honored to work with the Staff Sergeant Parker Gordon Fox Suicide Prevention Grant Program to connect Native and rural Montana Veterans with the lifesaving mental health care and suicide prevention services they need, and we look forward to continuing this crucial work,” said Great Plains Veterans Service Center Executive Director Chauncey Parker. “The Great Plains Veterans Services Center is grateful to Senator Tester for championing this suicide prevention grant program and helping us secure this critically important funding for a second year in a row so we can continue a very necessary mission in preventing Veteran suicide for Native and rural Vets.”

“The Staff Sergeant Parker Gordon Fox Suicide Prevention Grant Program has been critical in our efforts over the last two years to connect more veterans with the much needed resources and tools to help mitigate known risk factors that lead to suicide and we are grateful to receive this funding again to support our efforts in the Billings and Helena area,” said Adaptive Performance Center Co-founders Karen Pearson and Mitch Crouse.

This Congress, Tester is continuing his work to end veterans suicide by spearheading the bipartisan Not Just a Number Act to require VA to take a more comprehensive look at factors that best prevent veteran suicide, and the Making Community Care Work for Veterans Act to improve veterans’ access to lifesaving residential treatment programs for mental health and substance use disorder, especially in rural states like Montana.

If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, contact the Veterans Crisis Line to receive free, confidential support and crisis intervention available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. Dial 988, then press 1, chat online at VeteransCrisisLine.net/Chat, or text 838255.

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