Mental Health Clinician - Dak’elh
Top Benefits
About the role
FNHA Overview
About us
The First Nations Health Authority is a diverse and transformational health organization of professional, innovative, and dedicated team members and leaders.
The first of its kind in Canada, FNHA works as a health-and-wellness partner with BC First Nations to support self-determination and decision-making to improve health outcomes.
FNHA is proud to have been named one of BC’s Top Employers for 2025. Learn more about why we were selected here.
The Dadzi Wellness Centre is a groundbreaking, standalone First Nations primary care facility located in Fort St. James, in North-Central British Columbia. Serving the Dakelh members of the Nak’azdli Whut’en, Binche Whut’en, and Tl’azt’en Nations, our centre is ideally situated on Stuart Lake, close to the communities we support.
Under direction of the Clinical Manager, the Mental Health Clinician will work in alignment with the Centre’s Governance model, which includes all Nations receiving services from the FNPCI, supporting each Primary Care Centre’s priorities and service model goals.
Title: Mental Health Clinician
Salary: $88,948 - $104,644 - $120,341 per year (pay range explained below)
Contract: This term position ending March 2027 with the FNHA has the possibility of extension. When the term position ends with the FNHA, it is intended that this
position will be offered as a permanent role with the Dadzi Wellness Centre Primary Care Clinic.
Hours: 37.5 hours (core hours 9am-3pm Mon-Fri)
Location: Dadzi Wellness Centre, Fort St. James, BC, located on the ancestral territories of the Dak’elh Nations – Onsite
About the role
The Dadzi Wellness Centre is envisioned to work as part of a strategic integrated system within a culturally safe model that integrates family, and community supports consistent with a no barriers to care model. The centre is enriched with the traditions and culture of the Dak’elh people in a warm and welcoming space, working in harmony with existing health services and with no barriers to care.
As Mental Health Clinician, you will be part of a collaborative and multidisciplinary team that integrates an Indigenous worldview into its practice, honouring and respecting the values, beliefs, and customs of individuals, families, and communities, while also adhering to current best practices in the mental health field. You will provide trauma-informed care within a culturally safe environment that supports client healing and wellness, including consultation, intake, assessment, collaborative care planning, education, system navigation, and referrals — all delivered through a decolonizing lens. You recognize the intersectionality of each client and support their unique healing journey by tailoring treatment to meet their specific needs.
About you
To be successful in this role you will have/be –
Education and Occupational Certifications
- A Master’s degree in Psychology, Counselling, Social Work, or a related health discipline with a focus on mental health, or an equivalent combination of education, training, and experience.
- Advanced training in threat/risk assessment, trauma response, and brief intervention approaches (i.e. CBT, motivational interviews, SBTA).
- Current practicing registration with the applicable professional governing body in BC – i.e. a Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC), a Certified Clinical Counsellor (CCC), or a Registered Social Worker (RSW).
- A valid Class 5 BC driver’s license and willingness to submit a drivers abstract.
Experience
- 5–7 years of experience working within complex social systems.
- Min. 3 years of recent and relevant clinical mental health and addictions experience supporting children, youth, and/or adults.
- Min. 3 years of recent and relevant experience conducting assessments and providing trauma-informed interventions and post-vention services.
- Proven ability to deliver culturally safe mental health services in partnership with First Nations communities, utilizing holistic and decolonizing intervention techniques (i.e. somatic experiencing modalities, motivational interviewing).
- Care coordination experience in a multi-disciplinary team of internal and external partners is an asset.
Knowledge
- Strong foundation in therapeutic modalities, brief interventions, and trauma-informed, culturally safe care.
- Experience in emergency psychiatry, psychopharmacology, crisis response, conducting comprehensive and appropriate assessments (inc. suicide, violence risk, and trauma) and working with individuals with complex mental health and addiction needs.
- Working knowledge of the relevant legislations and health system policies.
- Knowledge of Indigenous worldviews, traditional healing practices, the socio-historical context of First Nations in Canada, and the ability to integrate both Western and Indigenous approaches to care.
- Familiarity with rural and remote community dynamics, including barriers to access and community-driven philosophies.
- Strong communication skills and the ability to build relationships with allied professionals, Elders, and community leaders, understanding the importance of ethical practice, professional boundaries, and critical self-reflection in clinical work.
- Awareness of intersectionality, power, and privilege, and how these influence client relationships and outcomes.
Please refer to Job Specification section of the Job Description for more details.
Working at FNHA
As a member of the team, you will have access to a wide range of employee benefits, including:
- Municipal Pension plan with an employer contribution of 9.31% (after 6 months)
- 3 weeks’ vacation, which increases with service to 4 weeks, plus 5 personal days, 1 volunteer day, and 14 public holidays including National Indigenous People’s Day, National Day of Truth and Reconciliation, Easter Monday and Boxing Day
- Access to group health benefits and a Health Care Spending Account through Canada Life on day 1 of employment
- And more!
The First Nations Health Authority is committed to respecting diversity within our workforce; preference will be given to individuals who identify as First Nations, Inuit, or Métis.
Leading with culture, all FNHA employees complete San’yas Indigenous Cultural Safety Training. We support our family to be leaders in wellness and all staff members develop a yearly wellness plan as part of their performance partnership and goal-setting.
The Pay Range is the minimum and maximum annual salary based on full time equivalent hours.
Incumbents are typically hired, transferred or promoted between the minimum and midpoint of the range based on their knowledge, skills, abilities and experience in relation to the role requirements.
The top 10% of the pay range is for the incumbents who are industry experts in the job with the combination of exceptional experience and competencies needed to perform all duties and responsibilities at a superior capability level. Internal employee compensation will be determined as per the FNHA Employee Total Compensation Policy.
How to apply
If this sound likes the opportunity for you, please click on the 'Apply for Job' button.
Closing date: October 8, 2025 (at 23:59)
For more information about us, please visit: www.fnha.ca/about/work-with-us
For information about Cultural Safety and Humility (fnha.ca) and for information about Land Acknowledgements
If you have any inquiries or issues please contact FNHA Recruitment at careers@fnha.ca
Follow us at: Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Instagram
About First Nations Health Authority
The First Nations Health Authority (FNHA) is the first and only provincial First Nations Health Authority in Canada. Dedicated to transforming health services for First Nations and Aboriginal people in BC, the FNHA is improving the health of communities by advancing the quality of health care delivered to BC First Nations and Aboriginal people.
Mental Health Clinician - Dak’elh
Top Benefits
About the role
FNHA Overview
About us
The First Nations Health Authority is a diverse and transformational health organization of professional, innovative, and dedicated team members and leaders.
The first of its kind in Canada, FNHA works as a health-and-wellness partner with BC First Nations to support self-determination and decision-making to improve health outcomes.
FNHA is proud to have been named one of BC’s Top Employers for 2025. Learn more about why we were selected here.
The Dadzi Wellness Centre is a groundbreaking, standalone First Nations primary care facility located in Fort St. James, in North-Central British Columbia. Serving the Dakelh members of the Nak’azdli Whut’en, Binche Whut’en, and Tl’azt’en Nations, our centre is ideally situated on Stuart Lake, close to the communities we support.
Under direction of the Clinical Manager, the Mental Health Clinician will work in alignment with the Centre’s Governance model, which includes all Nations receiving services from the FNPCI, supporting each Primary Care Centre’s priorities and service model goals.
Title: Mental Health Clinician
Salary: $88,948 - $104,644 - $120,341 per year (pay range explained below)
Contract: This term position ending March 2027 with the FNHA has the possibility of extension. When the term position ends with the FNHA, it is intended that this
position will be offered as a permanent role with the Dadzi Wellness Centre Primary Care Clinic.
Hours: 37.5 hours (core hours 9am-3pm Mon-Fri)
Location: Dadzi Wellness Centre, Fort St. James, BC, located on the ancestral territories of the Dak’elh Nations – Onsite
About the role
The Dadzi Wellness Centre is envisioned to work as part of a strategic integrated system within a culturally safe model that integrates family, and community supports consistent with a no barriers to care model. The centre is enriched with the traditions and culture of the Dak’elh people in a warm and welcoming space, working in harmony with existing health services and with no barriers to care.
As Mental Health Clinician, you will be part of a collaborative and multidisciplinary team that integrates an Indigenous worldview into its practice, honouring and respecting the values, beliefs, and customs of individuals, families, and communities, while also adhering to current best practices in the mental health field. You will provide trauma-informed care within a culturally safe environment that supports client healing and wellness, including consultation, intake, assessment, collaborative care planning, education, system navigation, and referrals — all delivered through a decolonizing lens. You recognize the intersectionality of each client and support their unique healing journey by tailoring treatment to meet their specific needs.
About you
To be successful in this role you will have/be –
Education and Occupational Certifications
- A Master’s degree in Psychology, Counselling, Social Work, or a related health discipline with a focus on mental health, or an equivalent combination of education, training, and experience.
- Advanced training in threat/risk assessment, trauma response, and brief intervention approaches (i.e. CBT, motivational interviews, SBTA).
- Current practicing registration with the applicable professional governing body in BC – i.e. a Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC), a Certified Clinical Counsellor (CCC), or a Registered Social Worker (RSW).
- A valid Class 5 BC driver’s license and willingness to submit a drivers abstract.
Experience
- 5–7 years of experience working within complex social systems.
- Min. 3 years of recent and relevant clinical mental health and addictions experience supporting children, youth, and/or adults.
- Min. 3 years of recent and relevant experience conducting assessments and providing trauma-informed interventions and post-vention services.
- Proven ability to deliver culturally safe mental health services in partnership with First Nations communities, utilizing holistic and decolonizing intervention techniques (i.e. somatic experiencing modalities, motivational interviewing).
- Care coordination experience in a multi-disciplinary team of internal and external partners is an asset.
Knowledge
- Strong foundation in therapeutic modalities, brief interventions, and trauma-informed, culturally safe care.
- Experience in emergency psychiatry, psychopharmacology, crisis response, conducting comprehensive and appropriate assessments (inc. suicide, violence risk, and trauma) and working with individuals with complex mental health and addiction needs.
- Working knowledge of the relevant legislations and health system policies.
- Knowledge of Indigenous worldviews, traditional healing practices, the socio-historical context of First Nations in Canada, and the ability to integrate both Western and Indigenous approaches to care.
- Familiarity with rural and remote community dynamics, including barriers to access and community-driven philosophies.
- Strong communication skills and the ability to build relationships with allied professionals, Elders, and community leaders, understanding the importance of ethical practice, professional boundaries, and critical self-reflection in clinical work.
- Awareness of intersectionality, power, and privilege, and how these influence client relationships and outcomes.
Please refer to Job Specification section of the Job Description for more details.
Working at FNHA
As a member of the team, you will have access to a wide range of employee benefits, including:
- Municipal Pension plan with an employer contribution of 9.31% (after 6 months)
- 3 weeks’ vacation, which increases with service to 4 weeks, plus 5 personal days, 1 volunteer day, and 14 public holidays including National Indigenous People’s Day, National Day of Truth and Reconciliation, Easter Monday and Boxing Day
- Access to group health benefits and a Health Care Spending Account through Canada Life on day 1 of employment
- And more!
The First Nations Health Authority is committed to respecting diversity within our workforce; preference will be given to individuals who identify as First Nations, Inuit, or Métis.
Leading with culture, all FNHA employees complete San’yas Indigenous Cultural Safety Training. We support our family to be leaders in wellness and all staff members develop a yearly wellness plan as part of their performance partnership and goal-setting.
The Pay Range is the minimum and maximum annual salary based on full time equivalent hours.
Incumbents are typically hired, transferred or promoted between the minimum and midpoint of the range based on their knowledge, skills, abilities and experience in relation to the role requirements.
The top 10% of the pay range is for the incumbents who are industry experts in the job with the combination of exceptional experience and competencies needed to perform all duties and responsibilities at a superior capability level. Internal employee compensation will be determined as per the FNHA Employee Total Compensation Policy.
How to apply
If this sound likes the opportunity for you, please click on the 'Apply for Job' button.
Closing date: October 8, 2025 (at 23:59)
For more information about us, please visit: www.fnha.ca/about/work-with-us
For information about Cultural Safety and Humility (fnha.ca) and for information about Land Acknowledgements
If you have any inquiries or issues please contact FNHA Recruitment at careers@fnha.ca
Follow us at: Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Instagram
About First Nations Health Authority
The First Nations Health Authority (FNHA) is the first and only provincial First Nations Health Authority in Canada. Dedicated to transforming health services for First Nations and Aboriginal people in BC, the FNHA is improving the health of communities by advancing the quality of health care delivered to BC First Nations and Aboriginal people.