Pubdate: Fri, 20 Oct 2017 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2017 The Edmonton Journal Website: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Page: A10 NEW WORLD TAKES SHAPE By next summer, a brave new world will dawn on Edmonton streets. Smokers will openly, and quite legally under certain restrictions, puff on joints purchased from a cannabis store selling a line of products sanctioned by and maybe even distributed by a provincial agency. If the Notley government decides to adopt a public retailing system instead of a private model, the province itself may adopt the role of pot dealer - a scenario that a few scant years ago would have rightly elicited a "what-have-you-been-smoking?" response in a region traditionally known for small-c conservative values. As historic and stunning as that development would be, it may not even be the most tectonic shift in societal and government attitudes toward drug use. That distinction may belong to Alberta's first supervised drug injection sites, the first of which are expected to open within months at four locations in Edmonton's inner city, as was announced Wednesday by the province after the facilities received approval from Health Canada. Three sites will be set up at the Boyle McCauley Health Centre, Boyle Community Services and the George Spady Centre, agencies which already offer services to clients with substance abuse issues. A fourth site is planned for the Royal Alexandra Hospital, which will be open to admitted patients only and become the first of its kind for a hospital in North America. That either legalized cannabis or supervised injection sites has come to fruition - let alone both - would have been unthinkable during the war on drugs waged in the "just-say-no" era of the 1980s and '90s. Even in this decade, the Stephen Harper government staunchly opposed both the legalization of marijuana and the concept of safe injection sites. The Conservatives argued that most Canadians didn't support the legalization of marijuana, that loosening the rules would make it more available to children and that its use was declining. As for safe injection sites, their anti-drug policy favoured prevention, enforcement and treatment, insisting that such harm-reduction programs didn't provide proper treatment for addicts. Governments never won the war on drugs and a deadly opioid crisis first took hold under the years the Harper government was in office. Now that the Trudeau government has taken the opposite tack by legalizing pot and approving more supervised injection sites, it's up to social agencies, law enforcement and health authorities to keep close watch on the outcomes. We will see whether a more progressive approach to drugs that emphasizes harm reduction and personal responsibility works better to reduce overdose deaths and social disruption than the previous hardline policies. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt