Pubdate: Tue, 05 Dec 2017 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.thespec.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Matthew Van Dongen Page: A1 CITY BACKS DOWNTOWN SUPERVISED INJECTION SITE Two community agencies on hand to lend support for initiative which is expected to be paid for by province The city has endorsed a supervised injection site for downtown Hamilton but it's up to a community agency to step up to run such a facility. The city's board of health endorsed the findings of a long-awaited study Monday that recommend adding at least one permanent site in the core for people to safely inject illegal drugs under the watchful eye of health professionals. But the study also recommended the site be "integrated" with an existing agency that already offers "harm reduction" services, like needle exchanges or addiction treatment. Hamilton's public health unit will offer "in-kind" support for a supervised injection site, said medical officer of health Dr. Elizabeth Richardson, but she added it is expected the province will fund operations by a willing community agency. Richardson said unspecified agencies in the downtown area have "informally expressed interest," but added it may take several months before an application is completed and vetted by the government. (The province is expected to pay for operations, but the federal government also has to give an exemption for illegal drug use and possession on site.) She wouldn't speculate about which agencies will apply to run a supervised injection site, but two groups that already offer related services showed up Monday to urge city support. Wesley Urban Ministries already runs a supervised consumption site for residents battling alcohol dependency, offers "harm reduction materials" for drug users and sexual health counselling, noted housing and homelessness director Dean Waterfield. "We know practising harm reduction leads to further treatment, better health care and better neighbourhoods," said Waterfield, who added 10 agency clients have died by drug overdose this year. He urged councillors to add a supervised injection site "to the tool box" of local agencies. AIDS Network director Tim McClemont pointed to the agency's partnership with public health on a needle exchange van as well as its own permanent site on King Street East, which he estimated sees more than 40 clients a day. "We are serving a population that is at risk and that requires a lot of help," he said. Both agencies are located within the recommended core area bordered by Barton Street, Queen Street, Ferguson Avenue and Main Street. An emotional Tammy Burgess told councillors her 23-year-old daughter, Brooke, died nine months ago after injecting drugs alone and overdosing. "I know my daughter would have been alive today if there was a safe injection site she could have gone to," said Burgess, who described her daughter's struggle against addiction and eventual relapse. The city study says a supervised injection site could help cut an alarming trend of opioid-related overdose deaths in Hamilton, which is considered a provincial hot spot. Nurse-supervised injection could also help check the spread of HIV and Hepatitis C via dirty needles, and offer a gateway to better health and addiction treatment. Some councillors asked about policing challenges surrounding the eventual site. Hamilton Deputy Chief Dan Kinsella said police would have to work on strategies to prevent a "potential decline in community safety," including the prospect of drug dealers targeting vulnerable residents and possible increases in theft or violent crime. But he also stressed police recognize the value of the harm reduction goal. "Any time we can save a life we want to do that," he said. Downtown Coun. Jason Farr said he welcomed the planned facility and dismissed the potential for "not-in-my-backyard" concerns. "This (injection drug problem) is already in our backyard," he said, pointing to the prospect of discarded needles "right now" in parks, laneways and public washrooms within walking distance from city hall. "We are seeing people with this (drug addiction) disease dying now This is crying out for a decision that we locate at least one supervised injection site in Ward 2." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt