The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Canada considers drug decriminal­ization to fight overdose crisis

- ANNA MEHLER PAPERNY

TORONTO — Canada’s federal government is considerin­g decriminal­ization of the possession of opioids and other illicit drugs in its efforts to tackle a spiralling overdose crisis, a government official said this week, even as data show the number of charges rising.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government is facing pressure to rein in drug overdoses, though it has previously downplayed decriminal­ization.

Vancouver has asked the federal government to exempt the city from part of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, decriminal­izing the possession of small amounts of drugs within city boundaries. A spokesman for Health Minister Patty Hajdu said on Wednesday that decriminal­ization was under considerat­ion and that discussion­s with Vancouver were under way but would not comment further.

That could subject people caught with small amounts of drugs to fines or mandatory treatment.

Canada’s opioid toxicity death rate for the first half of 2020, 14.6 per 100,000, was the highest since national data began to be collected in 2016, according to the federal government.

The number of people charged with drug possession of non-cocaine, non-heroin drugs in Canada more than tripled to 13,725 in the past decade to 2019, according to Statistics Canada. The number of people charged with heroin possession almost quintupled to 1,043.

“The idea that we’re kind of becoming more tolerant isn’t borne out by the data,” said Neil Boyd, director of the School of Criminolog­y at Simon Fraser University.

The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted illicit drug supply chains, making for a more toxic supply; it has also lessened supports and driven people to use alone, health advocates say.

Health Canada’s move to discuss decriminal­ization “comes at a time when the overdose crisis in our city has never been worse,” Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart said in a statement Wednesday.

Many health experts argue decriminal­ization would encourage drug users to use in safer spaces where they can access medical care.

Trudeau dismissed decriminal­ization last year, telling the CBC it was not a “silver bullet.”

Portugal decriminal­ized illicit drug possession and consumptio­n in 2001. In the 2020 election, Oregon voted to decriminal­ize.

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