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AP Photo/Jessica Hill
Shooting

One year after Sandy Hook, US to give $100m to mental health services

Vice President Joe Biden made the announcement as he met with families of children killed in the Newtown school shooting.

US VICE PRESIDENT Joe Biden has announced an extra $100 million to be give to improve access to mental health services as he met with families of children killed in the Newtown school shooting.

Half the money will go to enable community health centres to offer behavioural health services to people suffering from mental illness or addiction, according to an administration official.

Another $50 million will be earmarked by the Department of Agriculture for the construction of mental health facilities in rural areas, said an official.

“The vice president will discuss the new funding during a meeting at the White House with families who lost loved ones during the shooting in Newtown, as well as mental health advocates,” the official said.

On Saturday, the United States marks the first anniversary of the massacre at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, which left 26 people dead, including 20 six- and seven-year-old children.

The shooter, a mentally unbalanced 20-year-old named Adam Lanza, took his own life at the scene.

The killing, two weeks before Christmas, traumatised the United States and ignited renewed debate over the country’s lax gun laws.

A handful of states have since toughened their laws, but national reforms advocated by President Barack Obama failed to pass the US Senate.

Obama, who entrusted the fight against gun violence to Biden after Newtown, has vowed to tackle the problem using decrees and administrative measures. One angle has been to improve access to mental health care.

- © AFP, 2013

Read: Harrowing Sandy Hook 911 calls made public >

Read: Sandy Hook shooter ‘was obsessed by Columbine’, but motive for massacre still unknown >

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