Pubdate: Wed, 28 May 2008 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Frances Bula, Canwest News Service and Cindy E. Harnett, Times Colonist Referenced: The ruling http://drugsense.org/url/IoeOUnAY Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Insite (Insite) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) DRUG INJECTION SITE CAN STAY OPEN, JUDGE RULES Ruling Renews Talk of Victoria Facility; Insite Supporters Ecstatic Over Decision VANCOUVER -- Vancouver's supervised drug injection site is a needed service and can stay open under existing laws, a B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled yesterday. The decision is renewing talk of opening a similar facility in Greater Victoria. Canada's drug trafficking and possession laws are unconstitutional when they are applied to addicts using a supervised-injection site, Judge Ian Pitfield ruled. He said that Insite, the continent's only supervised illicit drug injection site that's sanctioned by government, should be allowed to remain open for a year even without a federal exemption from drug laws. The current exemption was due to run out June 30. The one-year extension should give the federal government enough time to rewrite its laws to allow for medical use of illegal drugs if they are part of a health-care program, Pitfield said. He said possession and trafficking laws are too broad and arbitrary to deal with people with drug addictions. "The blanket prohibition contributes to the very harm it seeks to prevent," he wrote. "It is inconsistent with the state's interest in fostering individual and community health, and preventing death and disease." He said those laws, when applied to Insite, threaten a person's constitutional right to life and security because "it denies the addict access to a health-care facility where the risk of morbidity associated with infectious disease is diminished, if not eliminated." Pitfield pointed out that people who drink alcohol or smoke tobacco to excess aren't denied treatment. The office of federal Health Minister Tony Clement released a brief statement reacting to the ruling: "We are studying the decision." B.C. Health Officer Perry Kendall said the ruling moves chronic addiction out of the area of law enforcement and back into health care, where it belongs. "I hope this will encourage the Vancouver Island Health Authority to start on its application process [for such a site]," Kendall said. A few small supervised injection sites were proposed for Victoria last year, supported by VIHA, the City of Victoria and Victoria police. But VIHA has not started the application process to Health Canada, pending further review. University of Victoria drug researcher Benedikt Fischer said if legal issues are a major stumbling block for VIHA, this decision might carry some weight. "At the same time, these decisions are still very much local decisions," Fischer said. "So I'm not really sure this now means everyone will drop what they've been working on and start working on a safe consumption site for Victoria. We'll see." Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe said the decision "will keep pressure on the [federal] government to look at opening others in the future." However, Lowe doesn't see that happening soon: "I can't see the government looking at opening new sites at this point." PHS Community Services, which runs Insite, and two drug users sought the ruling. It was greeted with near disbelief and euphoria by Insite advocates, who have lobbied for years -- first to open the site, and then to keep it open. "I just want to cry, I'm so ecstatic," said Liz Evans, one of the directors of PHS. Dean Wilson, a longtime heroin user who was part of the court case, celebrated. "We won. A couple of junkies have knocked off the prime minister. The most conservative judge in B.C. got that we are real people and we should have the right to have a normal life." B.C. Health Minister George Abbott said his government is pleased by the judgment. "We are strongly supportive of Insite as part of the continuum of mental health and addiction services in this province." Whether or not the federal government appeals the decision, yesterday's ruling "stands until such time as it is overturned by a judgment from a superior court," Abbott said. Vancouver Coastal Health spokeswoman Viviana Zanocco said her group's interpretation of the ruling is that it only applies to Insite and doesn't mean new sites can be started. Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca MP Keith Martin, a medical doctor who fought to keep Insite open, said if the "Tories appeal this decision they will be using ideology to trump science, which will result in the deaths of Canadian citizens." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake