CBC Edition

A former N.W.T. MLA lost his son to fentanyl. He wants to talk about it

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Wally Schumann was shocked when he got the call. It was the Hay River RCMP, asking if he could meet them at his house.

"Out in the driveway, the RCMP officer — you know, bless his soul — had to tell me that our son had passed away and he didn't know the de‐ tails at that exact moment. He was just asked to come do this."

Schumann, a long-time resident of Hay River, N.W.T., and a former territoria­l cabi‐ net minister, had spoken to his son on the phone that morning, in one of their usual early-bird chats.

CJ, who was 27, had called from Grande Prairie, Alta., to let his dad know he'd be a day late coming home from giving a friend a ride south.

Schumann checked his phone later: the call had come in at 5:09 a.m. CJ was found non-responsive around 8:30.

He had died after taking co‐ caine laced with fentanyl.

"That's how quickly this stuff happens," Schumann said.

Schumann had known his son and his friends smoked weed, but the use of harder drugs was news to him.

"I had no idea that he was doing this on a casual basis because I never seen it," Schu‐ mann said, "and I had a very close relationsh­ip with my son, more than most people, so …[it] totally took us by sur‐ prise when we got the call."

Since then, Schumann says he's had many conversa‐ tions with people who've lost loved ones to deadly opioids, many of whom were as sur‐ prised as he was.

Now, he wants to talk about it.

"Fentanyl is very promi‐ nent in our society and it's killed a lot of people and it does not hold back on who it kills."

6 deaths in 1 year in a town of 3,200

CJ died a little over a year ago, in December 2021. Since then, Hay River, a community of about 3,200 people, has suddenly found itself in the middle of Canada's opioid cri‐ sis. On Jan. 24, health officials announced that the N.W.T. saw six opioid deaths last year — all of them in Hay Riv‐ er and most linked to crack cocaine laced with fentanyl and carfentani­l.

CJ was born in Hay River and went to school there until

Grade 8, when he left to at‐ tend school in B.C. He spent a year at the University of Victo‐ ria before returning north for an apprentice­ship in the parts department at the Diavik Dia‐ mond Mine. When that was over, he returned to Vancou‐ ver with "a bunch of his friends" before taking a job at Ekati, another of the N.W.T.'s diamond mines.

Schumann spent time with some of those friends in Van‐ couver at a celebratio­n of life they held for his son.

There, Schumann learned that one of the rules of the house CJ had shared was: if you're going to buy any types of drugs, even marijuana — that's not from a govern‐ ment source — that you had to have a friend with you at all times and you had to have a naloxone kit with you.

"The day that that hap‐ pened with our son, he actu‐ ally broke his own rule," Schu‐ mann said, adding that "fen‐ tanyl is out there and so they were well aware of it."

Schumann recently spent Christmas with these same friends at the house, where the rule is still in effect.

Despite the explicit ac‐ knowledgem­ent among CJ's friends of the dangers, Schu‐ mann is quick to say that deaths from opioids are not limited to "heavy drug users."

"This stuff touches all walks of life."

'We gotta address this'

In recent months, Schu‐ mann has spent time with other grieving families in his community. He was sad to miss a community meeting in December where people dis‐ cussed the problem of addic‐ tions and a poisoned drug supply.

Like many, he believes the community needs to come together to find solutions, and "come up with some type of plan that we can keep go‐ ing forward."

"This stuff is in our small communitie­s," he said, point‐ ing to the recent deaths in Mayo, Yukon, and a giant drug bust of crack cocaine destined for Fort Good Hope, N.W.T.

"As a society and a coun‐ try, we gotta address this problem in a meaningful way, and I think this stuff needs to be talked about way more than we talk about it."

In the meantime, Schu‐ mann misses the early morn‐ ing chats he and CJ used to have before most people were even awake.

Though his grief is still raw, he took comfort from the re‐ cent podcast produced by CNN news anchor Anderson Cooper about loss and grief. Schumann says that's what taught him that he can still have a relationsh­ip with the son he lost.

"He was a great kid and we surely miss him."

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