June 17 (Reuters) – U.S. Health Secretary ⁠Robert ⁠F. Kennedy Jr. on ⁠Wednesday announced more than $700 million in new ​funding opportunities aimed at tackling mental illness, addiction and homelessness.

The ‌package includes a new $96 ‌million grant program, Safety Through Recovery, Engagement, and ⁠Evidence-based Treatment ⁠and Support, or STREETS, which will award funding to ​eight communities, the Department of Health and Human Services said.

Each community will be eligible for up to $3 million a year ​over four years.

The program is intended to help local ⁠governments ⁠build coordinated care systems ⁠for ​people experiencing homelessness who have substance use disorders, serious mental illness, ​or both.

HHS ⁠said the effort will bring together local governments, healthcare and housing providers, law enforcement agencies and courts.

Kennedy announced the funding during a visit to an Easterseals Michigan ⁠behavioral health clinic in Clinton Township, Michigan.

He said the investments would ⁠help move people “from the streets into treatment and recovery,” strengthen families, save lives and make communities safer.

HHS said the broader package includes $223.1 million for Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics, $238.6 million for the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, $80 million for substance use prevention, treatment and recovery programs, and more than $70 ⁠million for mental health services and supports.

The department said the funding is aligned with President Donald Trump’s “Great American Recovery Initiative” and an executive order focused on ​ending crime and disorder on U.S. streets.

(Reporting ​by Puyaan Singh in Bengaluru)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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