Needed mental health care for Calgary-area youth closer to reality

CASA House Calgary sod-turning marks full-circle moment and important construction milestone

“We know people who haven’t been as lucky as we were … to find that type of service when they needed it.”

That service is CASA House, and Jill Oliver is a parent of a former CASA House patient, Faer. Both Jill and Faer are passionate mental health care advocates and want to see more supports for more youth, closer to where they live and learn.

So it was especially meaningful and a full-circle moment on Thursday, May 21, 2026, for Jill to hold a shovel and ceremonially turn over some earth to mark the construction of a new CASA House now being built in Calgary, so more youth like Faer can receive the same life-changing mental health care that they received.

CASA Mental Health and Government of Alberta officials celebrate the start of construction on CASA House Calgary. Photo credit: Government of Alberta

CASA Mental Health is an accredited non-profit organization that provides mental health care for kids and youth under age 18, in between services available in community and hospitalization – which isn’t always the best place for a young person. CASA already offers its Trauma program and its school-based mental health program, CASA Mental Health Classrooms, in Calgary.

Some youth need more intensive mental health care treatment, and that’s where CASA House comes in. This voluntary, live-in program is for youth in grades 7 to 12 who have significant mental health challenges, and have not responded to previous therapy. Youth stay at CASA House for an average of four months, and receive education and treatment from a team of professionals, including school teachers, mental health therapists, psychiatrists, nurses and transition support staff.

Youth at CASA House may also have addiction issues, complex learning needs, family problems or social issues. They receive treatment that includes individual, group and family therapy, social and life skills training and on-site schooling, as well as transition support after they leave CASA House.

Calgary-area youth who need more intensive treatment and support than a CASA Mental Health Classroom – but don’t need CASA House – will be able to access CASA’s Adolescent Day Program (ADP), co-located at CASA House Calgary. The ADP is a unique semester-based program, designed for youth with significant mental health challenges who can still safely live at home. Youth attend the ADP daily as they would school, and receive group, family and individual therapy, social and life skills training while continuing their education.

“Jill and Faer represent our neighbours, our friends, our coworkers, and – sometimes – our own families struggling with mental health,” says CASA CEO Bonnie Blakley, who is herself a parent with living experience supporting a child with mental health struggles. CASA House, she says, “creates better students, better families, better citizens, and ultimately, better societies.”

“Some of the successes that we see for kids at CASA House … are kids who might be so anxious that they can’t even go to school for months, or years,” says Tanya Kendall, Director, Clinical, CASA House and Day Programs. “After spending time in our program they are able to get back to school, have repaired relationships with their friends and peers, as well as their families.”

At the end of the day though, the last word goes to Faer themselves: “I am so much farther than I ever thought I was going to get. I distinctly remember having thoughts when I was younger … well, no, I’m not someone who graduates high school … I’m not someone who gets a big job … and I was able to graduate with honours and outstanding achievement in the arts. And now I have a job, which is something that, at one point in my life, I never thought I would get.”

CASA House Calgary and the Adolescent Day Program will serve up to 81 patients each year and will begin taking referrals in late 2027. Located in the District in Stoney, near Deerfoot Trail and Country Hills Blvd., in northeast Calgary.

Learn more about CASA House Calgary and CASA’s expanding circle of care across Alberta.

For A Child In Immediate Crisis

If your child is in physical danger or is at risk of harming themselves or someone else, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department.

If your child is in crisis, dial the Edmonton distress line at 780-482-4357 for immediate assistance.