Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Science will help solve overdose crisis: Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Dec, 2022 04:22 PM
  • Science will help solve overdose crisis: Trudeau

RICHMOND, B.C. - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and British Columbia Premier David Eby shook hands, pledged to work together then posed for the media on Friday, two weeks after Eby was sworn in as premier.

Trudeau said it was a "real pleasure” to meet with the premier. The two men spoke privately before the media was allowed to take photos.

“It’s a great opportunity for us to really dig into the many things you’ve hit the ground running on," Trudeau said of their meeting.

He said they spoke about several things, including the housing shortage, child care, climate change, public safety, mental health, addictions and the overdose crisis.

Eby said he was glad to hear Trudeau talk about issues related to public safety and building a cleaner economy.

”I'm excited to work with you and get to work on those priorities (in which) we share responsibility and I think it'll be a great day," he said.

Their meeting came just a few days after B.C.'s coroner released the overdose death toll for October of 179 people, saying the illicit drug supply has created an environment where everyone who uses substances is at risk.

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe urged the government to ensure access to a safer supply of drugs was available across the province.

Trudeau told a crowd in Richmond, B.C., where he and Eby spoke about investments in child care, that they are working with provincial governments to ensure science and data are used to counter the epidemic.

"We were happy to move forward with B.C. in landmark steps on drug supply just a number of months ago, but we know there’s much more to do. We’ll continue to work hand-in-hand with the province to ensure people are kept safe," he said.

The coroner said more than 1,800 people died of illicit drug overdoses in the first 10 months of this year, while almost 10,700 have died since the province declared a health emergency in April 2016.

Trudeau called the Opposition Conservative leader's recent video "incredibly ignorant," referring to Pierre Poilievre's claim that a safe supply of drugs for addicts is a failed experiment.

Poilievre used a homeless camp in Vancouver's Crab Park as a backdrop in a video posted to social media to say that B.C. was on track to have over 2,000 drug overdose deaths for this year.

"This is deliberate policy by 'woke' Liberal and NDP governments to provide taxpayer-funded drugs, flood our streets to easy access to these poisons," he said.

Poilievre said the experiment has been tried in other countries with the same results: major increases in overdoses.

Eby said during questions from reporters that the province has an important partnership with the federal government in trying to separate people from those who are selling toxic drugs.

“We have a lot of work to do in our health-care system, which was key in our conversations, and mental health and addiction response is part of our health-care system," Eby said of his earlier meeting with Trudeau.

"I’ve already talked with too many parents who have lost kids, too many families who have been hurt by the overdose crisis.”

The premier said a new model of care that he announced days after he was sworn in will allow someone recovering from an overdose to go immediately from the emergency room to detox and on to treatment.

MORE National ARTICLES

U.K. trade talks won't change with Boris ousting

U.K. trade talks won't change with Boris ousting
In a statement outside Downing Street today Johnson said he will be stepping down as prime minister after demands he go from Conservative MPs and the resignation of a string of his ministers.

U.K. trade talks won't change with Boris ousting

'Nightmare' in B.C. hospital for Quebec man

'Nightmare' in B.C. hospital for Quebec man
Patrick Bélanger, 23, said his experience is a warning for residents of Quebec and all Canadians who take pride in a universal health-care system because doctors in other provinces could deny treatment to Quebecers by maintaining they won't be compensated.

'Nightmare' in B.C. hospital for Quebec man

Fire destroys Vancouver Downtown Eastside church

Fire destroys Vancouver Downtown Eastside church
Flames broke out at about 9:30 p.m. Wednesday in a two-storey building in the 100 block of East Hastings Street and quickly spread to the adjoining two-storey structure housing the Vancouver Street Church.

Fire destroys Vancouver Downtown Eastside church

Motor vehicle crash due to collision with a hydro pole leads to road closures in South Surrey

Motor vehicle crash due to collision with a hydro pole leads to road closures in South Surrey
Surrey RCMP is advising the public that 184 Street is closed between 32 Avenue and 40 Avenue following a single vehicle motor vehicle accident that stuck a hydro pole.

Motor vehicle crash due to collision with a hydro pole leads to road closures in South Surrey

VPD investigates Downtown Eastside machete attack

VPD investigates Downtown Eastside machete attack
Multiple witnesses flagged down police on June 19 around 7 p.m., after a 49-year-old man and a 38-year-old woman were approached from behind by the suspect and allegedly slashed while loading their luggage into a taxi near Main and East Hastings streets.

VPD investigates Downtown Eastside machete attack

Unsettled weather causes another B.C. flash flood

Unsettled weather causes another B.C. flash flood
Environment Canada is reporting about six millimetres of rain fell at the Prince George airport Tuesday, but doesn't mention the localized, intense thunderstorm that deluged the city's downtown core, flooding several streets.

Unsettled weather causes another B.C. flash flood