Truro News

Toronto trying to open injection site by end of week, councillor says

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A member of Toronto’s board of health says the city is trying to partially open at least one of three safe injection sites by the end of the week.

Coun. Joe Cressy says work is being done to open part of the site located in a city-owned facility ahead of its estimated completion date in the fall.

The effort come after harm reduction workers have set 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.

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.

Earlier this month, the city announced it was speeding up the opening of the three sites, as well as widening the distributi­on of the opioid overdose antidote naloxone to public health staff, community agencies and first responders.

It also asked local police to consider having some officers carry naloxone.

OTTAWA

The head of Canada’s postal service has announced he plans to step down next spring, nearly three years before his contract was set to expire.

Canada Post says Deepak Chopra has advised the Crown corporatio­n’s board of directors that he intends leave his position on March 31, 2018.

Chopra’s signalled departure comes as the federal Liberal government ruminates about whether to restore door-todoor mail delivery to tens of thousands of homes.

The former Pitney Bowes Canada executive joined the agency in 2011 as it faced a dramatic shift in revenue streams, from declining mail volumes to a growing parcel delivery business.

The previous Conservati­ve government had renewed his contract prior to the 2015 election, effective Feb. 2016, despite criticisms of Canada Post’s costcuttin­g moves, including the phase-out of door-to-door delivery.

The move to community mailboxes became a hot topic during the 2015 campaign, with the Liberals winning power under a platform that included a promise to review the home delivery decision.

Once in office, the Liberals placed a moratorium on any future conversion­s of home delivery to community mailboxes.

A spokespers­on for Public Services and Procuremen­t Minister Judy Foote, who has been on leave from her cabinet post, said a decision on the future of home delivery was expected some time before the end of 2017.

The president of the union representi­ng postal workers said he hopes Chopra’s departure signals an end to cost-cutting at Canada Post and a renewed commitment by the postal agency to maintain the services Canadians want.

Chopra leaves “a legacy of failed cuts,” said Canadian Union of Postal Workers national president Mike Palecek.

“So, hopefully this will be a new chapter for Canada Post.”

Chopra was among dozens of people appointed to plum patronage posts in the dying days of Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ve government who were asked, once the Liberals took power, to voluntaril­y step down. Chopra, who was reportedly paid an estimated $500,000 annually, declined to do so.

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