Toronto Star

Safe injection site opens its doors

Temporary space a stopgap until the three planned permanent sites open in fall

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

Toronto has taken a controvers­ial step to combat overdose deaths, opening its first city-run site for people to use illegal intravenou­s drugs.

“It provides a safe environmen­t for people who are going to use drugs,” Dr. Eileen de Villa, Toronto’s chief public health official, told reporters outside the building at Victoria and Dundas Sts. that already houses The Works needle-exchange program.

“We know both through research and lived experience it’s highest risk for overdose and deaths when people . . . use alone,” she said. “We provide a safe environmen­t, a supervised environmen­t for people to use their drugs safely, so they minimize harm to themselves.”

The temporary safe injection site, to be replaced by three bigger permanent sites this fall, will operate from 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday to Saturday.

In a plain clinical room, up to three people at a time can sit at a long table and inject drugs and put used needles into a yellow plastic disposal tub.

Staff expect to keep an eye on up to nine drug users per hour and hope each will stay at least 15 minutes for rest and observatio­n for any signs of overdose. The permanent site being built across the hall will accommodat­e up to five people at a time and open 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., seven days a week. The others will be at Queen West Central Toronto Community Health Centre on Bathurst St. and South Riverdale Community Health Centre near Carlaw Ave.

Health Canada had previously issued the city permission to host the sites. The federal agency inspected and approved the temporary site last week.

The city pushed forward with a temporary site after local harm-reduction advocates, anxious over a spike in overdose deaths apparently related to the highly toxic painkiller fentanyl, opened their own safe-injection site in a tent in Moss Park.

Volunteer Nick Boyce welcomed the city clinic, but said there are no plans to close the Moss Park site.

“These are people that are injecting drugs in that park already,” he said. “That’s why we went there. We’re trying to get them away from the playground, away from the swings, away from the baseball diamond into a tent where they can use safely, and we can look after them.”

Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti, who represents Ward 7 in the Finch Ave.-Weston Rd. area, arrived at the new site to tell reporters it will encourage drug use and cause problems in the area.

However, De Villa noted safe injection sites have been running for years in other cities and said researchon them “supports the benefit of supervised injection services as a harm-reduction measure, not only for drug users themselves, but also as a method by which to minimize social harms.”

In a statement, Mayor John Tory reiterated he doesn’t believe Moss Park is an “appropriat­e place” for a safe injection site. Tory did not say if he will try to get the pop-up site closed down.

Asked Monday about the police response to the Moss Park tent, Toronto police spokespers­on Mark Pugash said: “We’ll continue to operate on a day-by-day basis, but we have no plans to change our position.”

 ?? COLE BURSTON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A temporary injection site at Dundas and Victoria Sts. will operate from 4 to 10 p.m. Monday to Saturday.
COLE BURSTON/THE CANADIAN PRESS A temporary injection site at Dundas and Victoria Sts. will operate from 4 to 10 p.m. Monday to Saturday.
 ??  ?? City Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti said he thought the new site would encourage drug use.
City Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti said he thought the new site would encourage drug use.
 ??  ?? Nick Boyce says the “pop-up” site at Moss Park will remain open.
Nick Boyce says the “pop-up” site at Moss Park will remain open.

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