Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ontario Agrees To Fund Toronto Supervised Injection Sites Amid Opioid Crisis

09 Jan, 2017 11:38 AM

     

    TORONTO — Ontario is committing to fund three supervised injection sites in Toronto at an estimated annual cost of $1.6 million and about $400,000 to create the spaces.
     
    Toronto city council approved the supervised injection sites at existing downtown health-care facilities this summer, and six months later the province has confirmed its support.
     
    Health Minister Eric Hoskins spoke to Mayor John Tory today to say the province backs the city's plan, and wrote to the federal health minister, saying he believes it will save lives.
     
    The minister's letter comes just ahead of a meeting set for today in Toronto with politicians, public health officials and other stakeholders discussing how the city can tackle the fentanyl-fuelled opioid crisis.
     
    Hoskins says safe injection sites fit in with Ontario's opioid strategy, which looks to expand harm-reduction services, make changes to prescribing and dispensing and improve data collection.
     
    He says one in eight deaths of Ontarians between the ages of 25 and 34 is related to opioid use and Toronto has seen a 77-per-cent increase in overdose deaths in the past decade, rising to 258 in 2014.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Faces 8 Charges In 7-Vehicle, 1-Building Collision In Port Colborne, Ont.

    Man Faces 8 Charges In 7-Vehicle, 1-Building Collision In Port Colborne, Ont.
    PORT COLBORNE, Ont. — Police say a 51-year-old man is facing eight charges following a series of collisions in Port Colborne, Ont., that involved seven vehicles and a building, and sent two people to hospital.

    Man Faces 8 Charges In 7-Vehicle, 1-Building Collision In Port Colborne, Ont.

    Police Warn P.E.I. Drivers To Stop Being So Nice After Series Of Accidents

    Police Warn P.E.I. Drivers To Stop Being So Nice After Series Of Accidents
    CHARLOTTETOWN — Police in Prince Edward Island are warning drivers to stop being so nice to each other, after a number of accidents caused by motorists trying to be kind.

    Police Warn P.E.I. Drivers To Stop Being So Nice After Series Of Accidents

    RCMP Agent Goes Over Sting Operation Against Quebecer Facing Terror Charge

    RCMP Agent Goes Over Sting Operation Against Quebecer Facing Terror Charge
    MONTREAL — A Quebec man on trial on a terrorism-related charge was the subject of an elaborate sting operation by the RCMP.

    RCMP Agent Goes Over Sting Operation Against Quebecer Facing Terror Charge

    Proposed Changes To Statcan Designed To End Political Interference: Navdeep Bains

    Proposed Changes To Statcan Designed To End Political Interference: Navdeep Bains
    OTTAWA — The federal Liberals are moving on their promise to build a political firewall around Statistics Canada, but the fine print of the proposed legislative changes would maintain the government's power to tell the agency how to do its job. 

    Proposed Changes To Statcan Designed To End Political Interference: Navdeep Bains

    Trial Hears Sect Followers Could Foresee Girls Moved To U.S. For Sexual Purpose

    Trial Hears Sect Followers Could Foresee Girls Moved To U.S. For Sexual Purpose
    Peter Wilson delivered closing arguments at the B.C. Supreme Court trial for Brandon Blackmore, Gail Blackmore and James Oler, who are charged with removing girls from Canada for a sexual purpose.

    Trial Hears Sect Followers Could Foresee Girls Moved To U.S. For Sexual Purpose

    Viola Desmond Chosen As First Canadian Woman To Grace Banknote's Face

    Viola Desmond Chosen As First Canadian Woman To Grace Banknote's Face
    Desmond will grace the front of the $10 bill when the next series goes into circulation in 2018, Finance Minister Bill Morneau told a news conference Thursday at the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Que.

    Viola Desmond Chosen As First Canadian Woman To Grace Banknote's Face