Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver's Request For Cash To Address Opioid Crisis Would Drain Budget

The Canadian Press, 21 Jul, 2017 12:05 PM
    VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver says it will ask council to approve an additional $600,000 in spending on the opioid crisis as officials estimate over 400 people could die of illicit drug deaths by the end of the year.
     
     
    It says in a news release that the request will be made next week and the funds would be used to address five priority areas identified by first responders and the community. 
     
     
    Nearly half the money would be earmarked for initiatives to help urban Aboriginal communities, about $129,000 would be used to identify and deal with toxic drug supplies and $116,000 would help create programs to address the stigma of poverty and drug use.
     
     
    The remainder would be spent on efforts to reduce social isolation among drug users, especially men, and to expand drug interventions beyond the Downtown Eastside.
     
     
     
     
    If approved, the funding would empty Vancouver's $3.5-million contingency budget for the opioid crisis approved by Mayor Gregor Robertson and council in the 2017 operating budget.
     
     
    The $600,000 would be matched by just over $1 million in contributions from the health and non-profit sectors, and Robertson says the targeted, frontline investments would be a critical support for people working to save the lives of opioid overdose victims.
     
     
    Vancouver "continues to do more than its share to tackle the drug overdose crisis by fighting stigma and connecting people to the health and addictions services they need, when they need them, and before fentanyl tragically takes another life," Robertson says in the news release. 
     
     
     
     
    The city says data from the coroner and police reveal more than 200 opioid-related deaths occurred in Vancouver between Jan. 1 and July 2, with five reported last week alone, and the hike is believed to be due to widespread contamination of the illicit drug supply.
     
     
    It also says the BC Coroners Service reports that the painkiller fentanyl and related drugs have been detected in about 60 per cent of the overdose deaths in the city.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    WATCH: Racist Woman Demands 'White Doctor' For Son At Mississauga, Ont. Clinic

    WATCH: Racist Woman Demands 'White Doctor' For Son At Mississauga, Ont. Clinic
      Video shows woman making several demands for doctor who 'doesn't have brown teeth' and 'speaks English'

    WATCH: Racist Woman Demands 'White Doctor' For Son At Mississauga, Ont. Clinic

    Quake Measuring 4.6 Rattles Central Vancouver Island, No Damage Reported

    Quake Measuring 4.6 Rattles Central Vancouver Island, No Damage Reported
    GOLD RIVER, B.C. — An earthquake with a magnitude of 4.6 has rattled an area of central Vancouver Island.

    Quake Measuring 4.6 Rattles Central Vancouver Island, No Damage Reported

    B.C. Liberals Promise Welfare Rate Hike Days As Government Is Expected Fall

    B.C. Liberals Promise Welfare Rate Hike Days As Government Is Expected Fall
    VICTORIA — There will be a promise to raise welfare rates in British Columbia in the government's throne speech on Thursday, which is expected to set in motion the defeat of the Liberals after more than 16 years in office.

    B.C. Liberals Promise Welfare Rate Hike Days As Government Is Expected Fall

    Car Swept Away, But One Person Ok In Wash Out Near Williams Lake, B.C.

    Car Swept Away, But One Person Ok In Wash Out Near Williams Lake, B.C.
    WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — One person needed to be pulled to safety after an early morning wash out along a rural British Columbia highway swept away at least one vehicle.

    Car Swept Away, But One Person Ok In Wash Out Near Williams Lake, B.C.

    Who's Watching You At The ATM Machine?

    Who's Watching You At The ATM Machine?
    Vancouver Police are advising the public to be cautious following a string of debit card thefts and frauds

    Who's Watching You At The ATM Machine?

    B.C. Home Sales To Exceed 100,000 Units For Third Straight Year

    B.C. Home Sales To Exceed 100,000 Units For Third Straight Year
    The association says residential sales should reach 101,000 units this year, down from the 112,200 sold in 2016 but far ahead of the 10-year provincial average of 84,700 units.

    B.C. Home Sales To Exceed 100,000 Units For Third Straight Year