Vancouver Sun

Feds `evaluating data' on province's drug decriminal­ization, Saks says

B.C. has requested Ottawa make it illegal again to use in public following outcry

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

The federal minister for addictions and mental health says it's too early to draw conclusion­s about drug decriminal­ization, after B.C. asked Ottawa to scale back its pilot to help curb concerns over public drug use.

Ya'ara Saks said Monday that B.C. is only a year into its threeyear pilot project, which began in early 2023.

To make it happen, Health Canada issued an exemption to federal drug laws to decriminal­ize possession of small amounts of certain illegal drugs, including heroin, fentanyl, cocaine and methamphet­amine.

“We're still evaluating the data,” the minister said.

On Friday, B.C. Premier David Eby asked Health Canada to amend that exemption order to recriminal­ize the use of those drugs in public spaces such as hospitals, transit and parks.

While adults would still be allowed to use such drugs in private, they could be arrested for using them in public.

The request followed months of backlash from residents, health care workers, police and Conservati­ve politician­s about the project's effect on public safety.

Saks said she met with her provincial counterpar­t on Friday and the province's amendment request is under review.

“The overdose crisis, as I've said before and I say again, is a health-crisis issue. It is not a criminal one,” Saks told reporters.

B.C. was the first jurisdicti­on in Canada to seek the decriminal­ization of small amounts of hard drugs.

The province declared drug-related overdose deaths to be a public-health emergency in 2016, and the crisis worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Eby told reporters Monday that other jurisdicti­ons can learn from its experience with decriminal­ization to date. He said there must be resources in place to address public drug use.

“There are important lessons to be learned on where we are to date, that don't need to be repeated,” he said.

“Addressing the public's concern around public use is critical to having their understand­ing about taking a health approach to addiction. Balancing those two things is core, and I hope other jurisdicti­ons take that lesson and don't repeat our mistakes.”

Toronto has also requested an exemption from Health Canada.

Toronto Public Health said in a statement that it is monitoring B.C's experience. It added that in its proposed model, public drug use would remain illegal.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford repeated his call Monday for Toronto to drop that applicatio­n. Ford said he's spoken to Eby about how things have gone in B.C., and said “it's turned into a nightmare.”

Saks said Toronto's request is also under review, and each request for decriminal­ization will be treated individual­ly.

“We work with jurisdicti­ons on a case-by-case basis, making sure we have a full suite of tools available to help vulnerable population­s. That includes prevention, that includes harm reduction, that includes treatment and it includes a full set of health considerat­ions,” she said. “It's not an apples-to-apples situation and we continue to partner and work with jurisdicti­ons.”

More than 40,000 people have died from opioid-related deaths countrywid­e since 2016, when the Public Health Agency of Canada began collecting such data.

The agency says 22 people die every day from toxic drug deaths, and fentanyl is the leading cause. Most of the deaths are in B.C., Ontario and Alberta.

Health officials and advocates for drug users warn the situation is only worsening, given an increasing­ly toxic supply of drugs.

During question period on Monday, Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre pressed the Liberal government on B.C.'s about-face.

And he is requesting an emergency debate on the issue in the House of Commons.

“Until Justin Trudeau's dangerous drug decriminal­ization policy is entirely dismantled, it will continue to cause death, chaos and carnage across Canada,” he said in a letter to House of Commons Speaker Greg Fergus.

Poilievre has repeatedly called public drug use in cities like Vancouver a “dangerous experiment.”

He charges that it fuels addiction, and pledges that a future Conservati­ve government would pull out from harm reduction strategies and focus on recovery-oriented approaches instead.

Advocacy groups such as Moms Stop the Harm have asked to meet with Poilievre out of concern his proposal is ignoring evidence that harm-reduction strategies work to save lives.

Its co-founder spoke Monday at a parliament­ary committee that has been studying the opioid epidemic.

In a statement before her appearance, Petra Schulz said it has been “upsetting and infuriatin­g” to see loved ones' deaths politicize­d with “misinforma­tion and outright lies.”

“I urge members of Parliament to stop the angry, harmful and polarizing rhetoric and social-media posts, and to listen to people who use drugs when developing drug policy.”

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP ?? Sandra Botnen and Vince Hemingson are working to restore this old house at 320 Union street in Vancouver. The house will be rebuilt to look as it did in 1895, using as much of the original material as could be salvaged.
ARLEN REDEKOP Sandra Botnen and Vince Hemingson are working to restore this old house at 320 Union street in Vancouver. The house will be rebuilt to look as it did in 1895, using as much of the original material as could be salvaged.
 ?? ?? Ya'ara Saks
Ya'ara Saks

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