The Daily Courier

First Nation declares drug, alcohol emergency

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ZEBALLOS, B.C. — A First Nation on the northwest coast of Vancouver Island has declared a state of emergency over what its leadership describes as the “unrelating impact of drugs and alcohol” on its members, particular­ly children and youth.

A statement from the Ehattesaht First Nation says six young people have died from drug overdoses in the small village over the past few months.

It says the nation’s chief and council are calling on officials from the British Columbia and federal government­s to sit down with them to help find the resources necessary to create a “survival plan.”

The nation’s council has been trying to develop a comprehens­ive plan, it says, but they’ve had little success in breaking through “institutio­nal barriers to find programs that can meet the desperate needs of the people.”

Chief Simon John says the nation gets a call or letter every few weeks related to land-use issues and other government priorities, but it “can’t seem to get the attention of the social service ministries.”

He says Ehattesaht has reached the end of its ability to cope with the crisis with the “Band-Aids” it patches together.

Ehattesaht is one of 14 Nuu-chah-nulth nations on Vancouver Island, with more than 500 registered members.

John says his community is “treading water, exhausted” as it grapples with the intergener­ational effects of residentia­l schools.

“I know there are good words from government, but we are still being handed from one ministry or department to another,” he says. “Everyday I sit with families heartbroke­n with worry and its unacceptab­le.”

The nation is asking the government­s of B.C. and Canada to be “creative and flexible and meet a small and isolated (community’s) needs in its own way.”

In the meantime, it says Ehattesaht will try to stabilize the crisis by focusing on outreach to its most vulnerable members.

“We need help,” John says, adding a quarter of the nation’s members are underhouse­d, on the streets, or are children in care.

The nation cannot heal its land without putting people first, it says.

“Reconcilia­tion is a very hard work for many people to understand. For us, it has to be about our people now. We need the services and the supports along with the control over our lands, so our people are working and our communitie­s are healthy.”

The overdose crisis has claimed more than 11,000 lives in B.C. since the declaratio­n of a public health emergency in 2016.

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