Penticton Herald

Toronto hoping to open injection sites by end of week: councillor

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TORONTO (CP) — Officials in Toronto are trying to partially open three safe injection sites months earlier than anticipate­d, due to a rise in overdoses and deaths.

Dr. Eileen de Villa, Toronto’s medical officer of health, said “interim safe injection sites” will be opened at three Health Canadaappr­oved permanent sites until renovation­s to the long-term facilities are complete.

“We’re trying to open them as quickly as possible,” she said, adding that, while she didn’t have an exact date, the sites could be up and running in a matter of days.

Coun. Joe Cressy, a member of Toronto’s board of health, said he’d spoken to city health officials about the accelerate­d opening.

“We are hoping, at this point, to be in a position to have them open within a week,” he said.

Toronto Public Health is opening one of the interim sites. It said in a statement that the sites will be a safe, hygenic place for people to inject drugs they’ve bought beforehand under medical supervisio­n.

The other two interim sites will be at community health centres not run by the city.

The effort comes after harm reduction workers began setting up an unsanction­ed safe injection site in a downtown Toronto park, saying the space is needed as the city grapples with a string of overdoses and suspected overdose deaths.

“Yes, we have been seeing an increase — and that’s why we’re talking about accelerati­ng and expediting the plans we already had in place,” da Villa said.

As the interim sites open, she added, staff will work to ensure that the permanent safe injection sites open as quickly as possible.

“There are lots of logistics, lots of things that need to be taken care of,” she said - both in opening the interim sites, and preparing for longer-term facilities.

Da Villa didn’t have details on exactly how many staff members would be present at either interim or long-term facilities.

Last week, harm reduction workers said immediatel­y opening interim drug use spaces would save lives while the city’s three supervised injection sites were constructe­d.

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