National Post (National Edition)

Feds ease supervised injection site rules

- KRISTY KIRKUP The Canadian Press

The federal government is adopting a public-health approach to its drug control strategy, Health Minister Jane Philpott said Monday as she unveiled proposed new measures that would open the door to more supervised injection sites in Canada.

Newly tabled legislatio­n would, if passed, eliminate 26 strict requiremen­ts for new “consumptio­n” sites put in place by the previous Conservati­ve government, all within parameters set out by the Supreme Court, Philpott said.

“We need to take swift action on the opioid crisis to save lives,” she told reporters, describing the current fentanyl crisis as national in scope. “We must confront the fact there will be no quick reversal of the current situation.”

Currently, applicants for new injection sites must provide medical and scientific evidence of benefit, along with stakeholde­r letters from provincial health ministers, local police and regional health officials — stringent criteria that advocates say made it all but impossible to establish new sites.

A number of applicatio­ns for sites are under review, and the government intends to provide updates to make it clear in those cases what needs to be done to win approval, Philpott said.

“The circumstan­ces of every community will be different,” she said. “That’s why it’s important that communitie­s work together in their locations to be able to address their unique circumstan­ces.”

In places like downtown Vancouver, on the front line of the fentanyl problem, people are dying every day, she added.

“The evidence is very clear that when they are well establishe­d and well maintained in communitie­s that want and need the, supervised consumptio­n sites save lives and do not have a negative impact on crime rates in the community,” she said.

There are currently two drug injection sites in Canada — both in Vancouver.

Meanwhile, the new legislatio­n would, if passed, lift a restrictio­n that prevents border guards from inspecting packages that are under 30 grams in weight — even if they have reason to believe the packages contain illegal drugs. It would also place new restrictio­ns on the import of pill presses and encapsulat­ors, both commonly used in the production of illicit drugs.

NDP justice critic Murray Rankin, who represents Victoria, said he’s pleased to see the new changes — but disappoint­ed it has taken more than a year since the Liberals took power for them to come to the fore.

“Listen, I had — in one week — five people in the city of Victoria die,” Rankin said.

“This government taking these steps now is appreciate­d ... but it is hardly adequate and in the time it is going to take to debate these changes ... dozens of people are going to die.”

In British Columbia alone, officials say there have been 622 drug overdose deaths between January and October, about 60 per cent of them involve fentanyl.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada