Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Wants Federal Crackdown On Fentanyl Trafficking To Fight Health Emergency

The Canadian Press, 27 Jul, 2016 11:13 AM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia is asking the federal government to help it crack down on fentanyl overdoses that have been classified a public health emergency in the province.
     
    Premier Christy Clark wants the federal government to restrict access to devices, such as pill presses and tableting machines, and to pursue stronger penalties against people who import and traffic in fentanyl.
     
    Clark also wants Ottawa to ask the Canada Border Services Agency to search small packages for fentanyl to stop the drug coming into the country.
     
    Recent statistics from the coroner's service in B.C. show there were 371 deaths in the first six months of this year, about a 74 per cent increase compared with the same period last year.
     
     
    The service says the proportion of deaths where fentanyl was detected in toxicology tests jumped to about 60 per cent and that the drug was either used alone or in combination with other drugs.
     
    British Columbia declared a public health emergency in April when overdose deaths surged to an alarming rate in the first few months of this year.
     
    Clark says the province is also planning to improve access to treatment programs including its opioid substitution program.
     
    "Drug overdoses are absolutely senseless deaths, every one of them is a preventable tragedy that families feel in the worst possible way," she told a news conference at a hospital in Vancouver on Thursday.
     
     
    "Some have lost their lives to a tainted pill at a party, they didn't know what they were taking. Others were taken by that needless burden of addiction that they can't kick. We need to support all of them."
     
    The B.C. Centre for Disease Control also released measures it believes will help tackle the problem after a meeting between public health officials and the coroner's service.
     
    It wants to expand the availability of naloxone to reverse overdoses, expand access to opioid substitution treatments like Suboxone and methadone, and to increase checks on street drugs, among other things.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Parents Appeal Conviction Toddler Meningitis Death

    Alberta Parents Appeal Conviction Toddler Meningitis Death
    David Stephan, 33, and his wife Collet, 36, are seeking to overturn the judgment, said Calgary lawyer Karen Molle.

    Alberta Parents Appeal Conviction Toddler Meningitis Death

    BC Ferries Offers New Southern Gulf Island Schedules As Two Ships Set To Arrive

    BC Ferries Offers New Southern Gulf Island Schedules As Two Ships Set To Arrive
    The Crown corporation has released next year's schedules for the routes from Vancouver Island and the Mainland to Galiano, Mayne, Pender, Salt Spring and Saturna islands.

    BC Ferries Offers New Southern Gulf Island Schedules As Two Ships Set To Arrive

    Homicide Detectives Take Over After Person Dies In Port Moody, B.C., House Fire

    Homicide Detectives Take Over After Person Dies In Port Moody, B.C., House Fire
    One woman suffered severe burns, while a man and five children were being treated in hospital

    Homicide Detectives Take Over After Person Dies In Port Moody, B.C., House Fire

    Don't Invite Thieves Into Your Home, VPD Warns

    Don't Invite Thieves Into Your Home, VPD Warns
    There have been over a thousand residential break-and-enters in Vancouver in the first half of this year and the VPD are asking the public to stop inviting thieves into their homes.

    Don't Invite Thieves Into Your Home, VPD Warns

    Supreme Court Lays Out New Framework For Ensuring Right To Timely Criminal Trial

    Supreme Court Lays Out New Framework For Ensuring Right To Timely Criminal Trial
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada, citing a "culture of complacency" in the justice system, has set out a new framework for determining whether a criminal trial has been unreasonably delayed.

    Supreme Court Lays Out New Framework For Ensuring Right To Timely Criminal Trial

    Lost Soldier, Son Of Former B.C. Premier Recognized By University

    Lost Soldier, Son Of Former B.C. Premier Recognized By University
    James (Boy) Dunsmuir was among a group of Victoria residents and 1,193 men, women and children who died in the historic attack that factored into the United States' declaration of war.  

    Lost Soldier, Son Of Former B.C. Premier Recognized By University