May is Mental Health Month, a meaningful reminder to check in on yourself and those you love. For many families in Ontario's Black and African diaspora communities, seeking mental health support comes with real cultural and systemic barriers. Regulated social workers and social service workers offer a trustworthy path forward. Understanding who regulates them, how accountability works, and how to verify credentials before reaching out can make all the difference.
May is Mental Health Month, which makes it a good time to do something many of us put off: check in honestly on how we're doing and think about whether the people around us are actually getting the support they need.
For many families in Ontario's Black and African diaspora communities, mental health is a complicated subject. Cultural expectations, past experiences with systems that weren't built with us in mind, language barriers, and economic pressures all shape how, when, and whether people reach out for help. When someone finally does take that step, it matters enormously that the professional on the other side is qualified, ethical, and genuinely accountable.
That's exactly where regulated social workers and social service workers come in.
You care for your loved ones. When one of yours needs one of ours, social workers and social service workers are ready to provide trustworthy, quality care.
Who regulates the profession?
The Ontario College of Social Workers and Social Service Workers (OCSWSSW) is the provincial body responsible for overseeing these professions. It's also the regulator of the largest group of regulated mental health professionals in Ontario.
Its core job is public protection: making sure every registered professional meets the standards required to provide safe, ethical, and effective care.
Why the "regulated" part matters
When you're in a vulnerable moment, looking for support for yourself, a parent, a child, or someone in your community, you shouldn't have to wonder whether the person you're trusting is actually qualified.
Regulated social workers and social service workers are required to meet all of the following:
- Specific entry-to-practice qualifications before they can register
- The OCSWSSW's Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice, which governs how they work with clients
- Ongoing professional learning requirements to maintain their registration
That structure exists for a reason. It means accountability is built in and not left to chance.
How accountability actually works
Regulation only means something if there are real consequences when standards aren't met. The OCSWSSW has formal complaints and discipline processes in place. If you believe a social worker or social service worker has fallen short of professional standards, you can file a complaint. Those complaints are investigated seriously and are not filed away.
This oversight gives the public a real voice, and it gives professionals a clear standard to be held to.
One quick step: Check the online register
Before you engage a social worker or social service worker, it takes about 30 seconds to verify their credentials. The OCSWSSW's Online Register is free, publicly accessible, and lets you confirm:
|
What you can check |
Why it matters |
|
Whether the individual is currently registered |
Confirms they're authorized to practise |
|
Their employment information |
Adds context to who you're working with |
|
Any terms, conditions or limitations on their practice |
Flags any restrictions you should know about |
|
Disciplinary history |
Shows whether concerns have been raised in the past |
It's a small step, but it's the kind of thing that can give you real confidence before you or someone you love opens up to a professional.
The bottom line
All Ontarians deserve support on their journey to better mental well-being. Reaching out for mental health support takes courage. At the very least, the system should ensure the person you reach out to is worthy of that trust. During Mental Health Month and beyond, verifying credentials before you engage a professional isn't paranoia. It's just good sense.
Trust one of ours with one of yours.
Learn more at OCSWSSW.org.
