Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jan 2018
Source: Standard Freeholder (Cornwall, CN ON)
Copyright: 2018 Cornwall Standard Freeholder
Contact: http://www.standard-freeholder.com/letters
Website: http://www.standard-freeholder.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1169
Author: Tyler Dawson
Page: 6

HERE'S WHY IT'S TIME TO LEGALIZE ALL DRUGS

Picture this: You're an injection drug user in Ottawa, and, you're
worried the next time you use, you might die. So, you head for the
Shepherds of Good Hope, where there's a special trailer. There, you
can use your drugs - and someone will save you if you overdose.

Upon arrival, though, there's a police cruiser outside. Apparently
it's there a lot, according to Ottawa Inner City Health, which runs
the site, and officers question staff and clients.

And so you turn around and take your chances injecting elsewhere, to
avoid being harassed by police.

Maybe you'll overdose and there will be nobody to save you. So it
goes.

With between 130 and 170 people actually using the injection trailer
daily, it's got to be asked: How many are not showing up because
they're afraid of the police?

This situation is a dangerous one. If injection sites are providing
lifesaving medical care - and they are - then anything that keeps
people away risks indirectly causing death.

And so, a solution: It's time that drugs - all drugs - are
decriminalized, then legalized and sold like alcohol or tobacco or
(soon) marijuana. Decriminalization would remove criminal penalties
for drug use. Legalization would allow regulated use and sale.

The arguments in favour of pot legalization apply to other drugs, too,
including improved quality, the end of the black market and a
reduction in crime, desperation and overdoses.

It's also the right thing to do. It's up to each of us to decide how
we treat our bodies.

What the Shepherds struggle shows is that humane drug policy relies
too much on police acquiescence. A safe injection site works only if
police abide by a gentleman's agreement to not arrest or harangue
people coming in and out.

Apparently, it worked fine for the first little while that the site
was open. But something has gone wrong - fuelled, no doubt, by the
fear of a no-go zone where cops can't arrest drug dealers and users
smash and grab everything they can to finance their habit. (Such a
no-go zone does not exist in Ottawa, says the police force.) The
evidence that crime goes up around injection sites is weak at best,
but that certainly hasn't stopped the promulgation of this fear.

If police aren't going to play ball with supervised injection, which
has the potential to save those who are in the same situation as
hundreds and hundreds of people who died from fentanyl overdoses in
Canada last year, then it's time police are removed from this equation
as much as possible.

Decriminalization and legalization would kill many birds with one
stone. In December, Dr. Theresa Tam, chief public health officer of
Canada, described "a very toxic drug supply" in Canada, with fentanyl
expected in a majority of all opioid-related deaths. This is not a
problem that policing can fix. It make it worse - certainly police do
by keeping people away from injection sites.

If drugs are regulated, they're safer. If they're bought in stores, it
eliminates seedy areas or dealers. If drug use isn't criminalized and
the stigma goes down, it becomes easier to get people into treatment,
if they want to.

Jagmeet Singh, the new NDP leader, has floated decriminalization.
While this would be the right thing to do, it's not likely to be a
vote-getter, so it'll stay on the outskirts of Canadian politics. It's
a shame, really, but perhaps Singh will change our political culture.

It's more of a shame that drug users and the people who care for them
feel the police in Ottawa are endangering them.

Even if the police think they aren't responsible here, that doesn't
make it so. The consequences, even if unintentional, require the
police to do a serious re-think about how they're policing near
injection sites.
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MAP posted-by: Matt