Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jun 2017 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2017 Postmedia Network Contact: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Yolanda Cole Page: A1 PLANS INCH AHEAD FOR CITY'S FIRST SAFE DRUG-USE SITE Alberta Health Services has submitted an application to establish Calgary's first supervised consumption site for drug users in the Sheldon M. Chumir Health Centre, Associate Minister of Health Brandy Payne confirmed Wednesday. The announcement comes as the province comes to grips with an opioid crisis that has killed hundreds, and as Edmonton seeks to open four supervised consumption sites. Community consultations on the proposed service at the Beltline facility will take place over the coming weeks, beginning with the distribution of postcards to residents and businesses within a two-kilometre radius of the health centre to notify them of small-group discussions. Payne said last month AHS began a federal exemption application process. To establish supervised consumption services, an application must be made to Health Canada for an exemption for medical purposes under the Controlled Drug and Substances Act. "This facility was identified as a potential location because of the wraparound services that are already here, such as primary care, counselling and mental health supports," Payne said at a news conference at the health centre. "This facility was identified as a potential location because of the wraparound services that are already here, such as primary care, counselling and mental health supports," Payne said at a news conference at the health centre. "Clients can also access opioid dependency treatment, which can include counselling, methadone or suboxone treatment as a safer alternative to illicit drugs." Both Mayor Naheed Nenshi and Calgary police Chief Roger Chaffin have written letters of support to accompany the federal application. Nenshi said the city must move forward "based on the evidence." "And the evidence is that these services keep people alive," he said. Dr. Nicholas Etches, medical officer of health for the Calgary zone of Alberta Health Services, said supervised consumption services provide a place where people can use drugs in a monitored, hygienic environment to reduce harm from substance use. "Supervised consumption services have been shown to reduce overdose deaths, reduce transmission of disease, reduce public substance use and reduce publicly discarded needles," he said. Petra Schulz, who lost her 25-year-old son, Danny, to a fentanyl overdose in 2014, said she's pleased Calgary is moving in the direction of supervised consumption services. But she added that while the service is "very-much needed," she also wants to see different solutions for drug users outside the downtown. "We need to bring rapid access to treatment wherever people are so this is great, but we can't stop here," she said. "We need to move out, and not just in the suburban communities, the cities, but there are many rural Albertans that are using drugs and that need help." In the first three months of 2017, there were 113 deaths from a fentanyl overdose in Alberta. More than 50 of those deaths were in Calgary. Last year, the majority of people who died of opioid overdoses in both Calgary and Edmonton lived outside the city's core. However, the areas with the highest concentration of EMS responses to opioid-related events in 2016 were the downtown areas, according to information from Alberta Health. Chaffin said police would accept "no increase in social disorder" in the area surrounding the site or anyone "preying on" people attending the clinic. Payne said the province is hoping to be able to open the doors on the new facility by the end of this year. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt