SOUND OFF: A healthier Kamloops starts with financial empowerment
CONSIDER A SITUATION that can bring someone to the brink of homelessness: a 73-year-old widower learns he must move out of the basement suite he has rented for the past two years. He finds a studio apartment he can just barely afford on his Canada Pension Plan income, but after rent he is left with less than $80 for groceries for the month. He knows the math does not work. What he does not know is that he may qualify for benefits, tax credits or other financial supports that could help keep him housed.
For many people, this is what financial precarity looks like. It is not always dramatic at first. Sometimes it is an older adult on a fixed income. Sometimes it is a person leaving hospital, fleeing violence, living in supportive housing or trying to recover from substance use. What they often have in common is not a lack of effort, but a lack of access to information, benefits, tax-filing support and systems that are difficult to navigate without help.
That is why CMHA Kamloops is launching Pathways to Financial Empowerment, a new program designed to help people access benefits, file taxes, build financial knowledge and strengthen long-term stability.
When we talk about health and wellness, most people think first about counselling, medical care, housing, food security or addiction support. All those matter deeply. But there is another part of well-being that often goes overlooked, even though it shapes daily life in profound ways: financial empowerment. Financial empowerment is not about wealth. It is about helping people access support, build stability and gain more control over their lives while preserving dignity and independence.


