Pubdate: Fri, 09 Dec 2016 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Authors: Cindy E. Harnett and Sarah Petrescu Page: A1 TEMPORARY DRUG-USE SITES OPENING NEXT WEEK Temporary supervised-consumption services for injection-drug users are opening in Victoria as an emergency measure to curb the unprecedented number of overdose deaths in B.C. this year. Two will open next week and a third later in the month. The services will walk "a fine line" because Victoria's proposed supervised-consumption sites don't have official approval from Health Canada. "Our main concern is to save people's lives - everything else is secondary," Health Minister Terry Lake said Thursday. "We are seeing an alarming increase in illicit-drug overdose deaths and action is required at all levels." The province said the temporary overdose-prevention sites will be at two locations awaiting federal approval for long-term supervised consumption services. A public site will be in a tent or trailer at Our Place Society, 919 Pandora Ave., and a private site will be in a residential building at 844 Johnson St. The Johnson Street building houses people who moved from the tent city on the courthouse lawn and already has "witnessing" for drug users who don't want to use alone. A site with a trailer is also expected to open in the Rock Bay area. Additional sites are opening across the province, including two in Vancouver. The province said the sites were chosen because they are in areas with high numbers of overdoses. They provide a safe space for people to use illicit drugs, where they can be monitored by staff who are equipped to respond to overdoses, it said. "We're going to start off with a tent in the courtyard and will hire a paramedic to be on site," said Grant McKenzie, communications director for Our Place Society. The organization has intervened in 40 overdoses this year and had three overdose deaths at its shelters. It hosts memorials for those who have died. Our Place staff will work with the Society of Illicit Drug Users to operate the site and engage people to use the services, which will be open from 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Harm-reduction supplies and overdose-prevention education are part of the plan. Staff will intervene in overdoses with the antidote naloxone, when needed. "Peer discussion and educating people will be a big part of it," said McKenzie, adding he will meet with neighbours next week to discuss how the site will operate. Jack Phillips, from SOLID, said he's glad the province and Island Health, who are overseeing the sites, acted when they did. "There was a lot of behind-thescenes frustration with waiting for these services and people were about to take action," he said. "Trying to get people to use these services will be a challenge but with the cold weather it's a perfect opportunity." Phillips does street outreach with SOLID, distributing harmreduction supplies and collecting discarded needles. Island Health chief medical officer Dr. Richard Stanwick said the sites are interim measures while supervised-consumption-site applications to Health Canada are awaiting approval. "We are walking this very fine line and we recognize it. We don't want to breach the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act while waiting for Health Canada approvals." Heath Canada said it is supportive of supervised-consumption sites when communities view them as a successful harm-reduction tool. "Clearly the situation in B.C. is extraordinary, and B.C. has opted to take extraordinary measures to deal with it," said David Clements, communications director for federal Health Minister Jane Philpott. Philpott has told her department that there should be no unnecessary barriers for communities that want to open supervised consumption sites, Clements said. Stanwick said the safe operation of the interim sites is supported by Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps and Victoria police, who said they will maintain their policy of focusing on drug trafficking and defer first response to overdoses to fire and ambulance unless a police presence is requested. According to the B.C. Coroners Service, 120 people died from illicit drug overdoses on Vancouver Island in the first 10 months of 2016. Across B.C., there were 622 overdose deaths January through October, compared with 397 in the same period last year. Stanwick said November's overdose-death numbers for the province will be in the triple digits and could be 50 per cent higher than in any other month. "Desperate times call for desperate measures," Stanwick said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt