Pubdate: Fri, 30 May 2008 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Glenn Kauth SAFE-INJECTION SITE GETS SUPPORT IN E-TOWN Despite federal government opposition, Edmonton should consider a safe-injection site for drug users, the head of a downtown needle-exchange program says. "We absolutely support Insite and think that type of safe-injection site should be available across the country, including Edmonton," said Street Works program manager Marliss Taylor. The comments come after the B.C. Supreme Court ruled in support of Insite, a Vancouver program that allows users to bring in their own drugs to inject under the watch of medical staff. In his decision, Justice Ian Pitfield ruled it would violate users' constitutional rights to deny them services to treat their addictions. As a result, he struck down laws against drug use at supervised-injection sites. This week, Health Minister Tony Clement said he'll ask Justice Minister Rob Nicholson to appeal the B.C. ruling. Among his concerns with Insite, he cited data that suggests the program saves just one life a year from overdose. "A better thing to do is to treat people, to prevent people from going on the drugs in first place," he said. For Taylor, the federal move wasn't unexpected. "There's a strong ideological drive, so I'm not surprised that they appealed," she said. In Edmonton, officials, including Mayor Stephen Mandel, have occasionally raised the possibility of a supervised-injection site here, particularly in light of evidence that such programs help prevent overdoses, steer addicts into treatment and cut down on disease transmission. A recent poll conducted for the Canada West Foundation indicated the idea of a safe-injection site has significant public support. According to the survey, 47% of Edmontonians think having a program here is a good idea. At Capital Health, associate medical officer of health Dr. James Talbot says officials are watching developments in Vancouver carefully but notes that having a program in Edmonton hasn't been an option since a federal exemption from drug laws applied only to Insite. Still, he said research so far has been "fairly convincing that the safe-injection site does have benefits for the community it serves." Taylor, however, said that while she believes Edmonton should have a program, the city needs to meet more basic needs first. The Street Works needle-exchange program, for example, runs its van only five evenings a week within the downtown core. With a growing homeless population leading to more public drug use, expanding the service should be a priority, she argued. "As homelessness becomes a bigger and bigger issue, the result is that we have a lot more people injecting in public because they don't have a place to go," said Taylor. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek