Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa approves British Columbia's request to make public drug use illegal again

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2024 03:09 PM
  • Ottawa approves British Columbia's request to make public drug use illegal again

Public drug use became illegal in British Columbia once again on Tuesday, after the federal government granted the province's request to scale back its drug decriminalization pilot. 

The change represents a major policy climbdown for the provincial NDP government more than a year into the three-year pilot program with Ottawa that is aimed at tackling the deadly overdose crisis. 

Public drug use became illegal in British Columbia once again on Tuesday, after the federal government granted the province's request to scale back its drug decriminalization pilot. 

The change represents a major policy climbdown for the provincial NDP government more than a year into the three-year pilot program with Ottawa that is aimed at tackling the deadly overdose crisis. 

But Ya'ara Saks, Canada's mental health and addictions minister, dismissed any notion the shift is an admission the program was a failure.

"This is the first time this has been done," she told reporters on Parliament Hill. "As in any pilot, it is a process of learning." 

On April 26, the province announced that it had asked Health Canada to amend the exemption allowing the decriminalization of small amounts of drugs such as heroin, fentanyl, cocaine and methamphetamine.

Following widespread concern from the public, nurses and police around consumption of drugs in public, B.C. Premier David Eby said his NDP government wanted to ban the use of those drugs in spaces such as hospitals and parks.

Police in Vancouver have said they were unable to deal with concerns about public drug use.

"Effective today, with Health Canada's approval, public drug use is illegal in all public spaces in B.C.," Mike Farnworth, the province's public safety minister, said Tuesday. 

"When police are called to a scene where illegal and dangerous drug use is taking place, they will have the ability to compel a person to leave the area, seize the drugs when necessary, or arrest the person if required."

Addiction remains a health matter, not a criminal one, Farnworth said, but "that doesn't mean anything goes."

"Parks and beaches have to be safe and welcoming for families, the doorways of small businesses have to be free for customers, and hospitals have to be places where people can work and get care safely," he said. 

The minister said police in the province will be informed of the changes in a forthcoming letter. Officers will be able to "use discretion," he added, and the new guidance will be coupled with training. 

Saks said she expects police to direct people who need help to proper support systems and only make arrests in extreme cases where public safety is at risk.

She said it's clear the opioid and overdose crisis, which is being driven by an increasingly toxic drug supply, must be treated as a public health issue. 

"That being said, communities need to be safe, people need to have confidence that in their own communities they can move about freely and feel comfortable."

"We know that we have to have a balance (between) public safety and public health," she said. 

B.C. Addictions Minister Jennifer Whiteside said decriminalization was "never about providing space for unfettered public drug use."

"The intention was to ensure that people felt that they should not be afraid to reach out for help wherever they were using, whether they're using at home or whether they're using in other spaces."

Saks acknowledged there are lessons to be learned from the B.C. pilot, such as ensuring there are health services in place to help people who are struggling and ensuring that police have the tools they need to manage public safety. 

She said decriminalization is only one policy tool to deal with the toxic overdose crisis, adding that she is frustrated by Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's efforts to make the issue political.

Poilievre has repeatedly attacked decriminalization as well as the "safer supply" program, the government-funded pharmaceutical alternatives like hydromorphone that are provided to drug users as a way to combat the poisoned drug supply. 

"Decriminalization is about ensuring that people don't have to face stigma and actually go to get help," Saks said Tuesday. 

"The Opposition has made this a dehumanizing debate for those who actually need help."

Poilievre criticized Saks for not ruling out the possibility of piloting decriminalization in Toronto. His office released a statement following Tuesday's announcement saying the minister must rule out any further expansion and slammed the fact it took 11 days to make a decision about B.C. 

Saks said the government was taking a careful approach as opposed to a "knee-jerk reaction." 

Poilievre's office said the Liberals still refuse to acknowledge that "their dangerous policy was a failure." 

The City of Toronto's public-health agency said its long-standing request to advance its own program remains with Health Canada. 

But Saks said the request is "dormant" and the application has not reached her desk. 

The application that was sent in more than two years ago was found to be "insufficient," the minister said, declining to elaborate any further. 

Ontario Premier Doug Ford has vowed to fight any attempt from Toronto to pilot decriminalization, even though the city's public-health agency has said it wouldn't try to do so in public areas. 

Even in B.C., possession in private residences and other spaces remains decriminalized. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

RCMP still probing alleged meddling in federal elections, but offers few details

RCMP still probing alleged meddling in federal elections, but offers few details
RCMP commissioner Mike Duheme says the police force has several open investigations into possible foreign interference in the last two general elections — probes that began only after the votes were counted. Duheme declined to elaborate Thursday on the number or nature of the probes, citing the integrity of the investigations, privacy concerns and public safety.

RCMP still probing alleged meddling in federal elections, but offers few details

9 years for cocaine smuggler: CBSA

9 years for cocaine smuggler: CBSA
The Canada Border Services Agency says a man who got caught smuggling more than 70 kilograms of cocaine into Canada through the Pacific Highway border crossing has been sentenced to nine years in prison. Gerry Crawley, a commercial driver from New Brunswick, came through the Surrey crossing in March 2021 with a tractor-trailer of products from California.

9 years for cocaine smuggler: CBSA

BC announces changes to Police Act

BC announces changes to Police Act
The province has announced changes to the Police Act that it says would strengthen oversight of local police forces and improve their governance. The legislative changes would allow B-C’s police complaints commissioner to call a public hearing earlier into misconduct investigations, and give the commissioner the authority to conduct systemic reviews into causes or contributors of police complaints.

BC announces changes to Police Act

Canadian wildfires 'entirely' drove surge in global tree loss in 2023, study says

Canadian wildfires 'entirely' drove surge in global tree loss in 2023, study says
A global forest study says Canadian wildfires last year were "entirely" to blame for a worldwide surge in tree losses. The study released by researchers at the University of Maryland on the Global Forest Watch website says tree cover loss in 2023 reached 28.3 million hectares globally, a 24 per cent jump driven by Canada's loss of 8.6 million hectares last year.

Canadian wildfires 'entirely' drove surge in global tree loss in 2023, study says

NDP MPs Charlie Angus, Carol Hughes, Rachel Blaney opt against seeking re-election

NDP MPs Charlie Angus, Carol Hughes, Rachel Blaney opt against seeking re-election
NDP MPs Carol Hughes and Rachel Blaney have joined Charlie Angus in deciding that they won't run again in the next federal election. The federal New Democrats delivered the news in a joint announcement, saying all three want more family time after years of dedicated public service.

NDP MPs Charlie Angus, Carol Hughes, Rachel Blaney opt against seeking re-election

Airstrikes on aid workers don't 'just happen,' Trudeau says after Netanyahu comments

Airstrikes on aid workers don't 'just happen,' Trudeau says after Netanyahu comments
Attacks on aid workers are not just something that happens in war, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday, slamming Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's defence of a deadly airstrike on aid workers in central Gaza on April 1. Canadian Army veteran Jacob Flickinger, 33, was among those killed while delivering food aid for World Central Kitchen.

Airstrikes on aid workers don't 'just happen,' Trudeau says after Netanyahu comments