Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jun 2017 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2017 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Sarah Petrescu Page: A4 DRUG-CONSUMPTION SITE AWAITS FEDERAL APPROVAL Victoria's first federally approved supervised drug-consumption service will likely be in the supported-housing building on Johnson Street that houses former tent city residents, says Island Health's chief medical health officer. Dr. Richard Stanwick said the site at 844 Johnson St. would be the first on the Island to embed supervised drug-consumption with housing. Island Health said Tuesday the application for the site was recently submitted to the federal government. Stanwick said he's hoping for rapid approval, adding it could open "very soon" once it's approved. The building is already home to an overdose-prevention site. "There's very little to do at the [Johnson Street] building. Basically, change the sign and add services." Health Canada will not give time estimates on the approval process. This is the health authority's second application for supervised-consumption services. The first, at 941 Pandora Ave., was submitted in January. But Stanwick said that space, which requires extensive renovations and includes 10 injection booths, would not likely open before next spring. Application plans for a third site are on hold. The former Central Care Home at 844 Johnson, now called Johnson Street Community, is owned by B.C. Housing and managed by PHS Community Services. The 147-unit building was purchased by the province in 2016 to house homeless people living in the tent city on the nearby courthouse grounds. There has been an overdose-prevention site at the building since December 2016, one of several opened across the Island as an emergency measure in response to the overdose crisis. Island Health said since that time, about 170 residents and their guests have used the site. Out of nearly 4,000 visits to inject illicit substances, there were two overdoses but no deaths. Two people died from suspected overdoses in the building, but not at the prevention site, Stanwick said. "This building is a prime example of how services can connect with people where they are." Andy Bond from PHS said the overdose-prevention room has had a stabilizing effect on the building. He said the number of overdoses in the building is down and staff are better able to respond to them. "In the past, when staff [responded], it was almost always after a significant amount of time had elapsed," he said. It took time, he said, for someone to run and alert staff, to gather an emergency kit and oxygen, and then finally to get to the person, who could be on any one of the four floors. "The effect of that lost time is that the person is cyanotic, blueish from a lack of oxygen, with a very low pulse, which can result in brain damage. For staff, it is very stressful, scary, sad and overwhelming." Federal approval will give the site long-term stability and added addiction services, he said. That could include access to additional opioid-substitution therapies and more doctors' services. In the first four months of 2017, 488 people in B.C. died from overdoses. There were 84 deaths on the Island, including 37 in Victoria. Statistics for May will be released by the coroners service next week. Stanwick said he doesn't expect to see a decline in the numbers, given that potentially deadly fentanyl has been turning up in all kinds of illicit drugs. "That's worrisome and we have to act," he said. He'd like to see supervised-consumption services on the north Island, Duncan and Nanaimo. Plans for a Nanaimo application are on hold, after city council refused to change a bylaw preventing the services. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt