Canadian province tries decriminalizing drugs to fight overdose crisis
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[February 01, 2023]
By Jennifer Gauthier
VANCOUVER (Reuters) -The western Canadian province of British Columbia
on Tuesday began a three-year pilot program to stop prosecuting people
for carrying small amounts of heroin, meth, ecstasy, or crack cocaine,
as part of an effort to fight a drug overdose crisis.
B.C. accounts for about a third of the 32,000 deaths due to overdose and
trafficking nationally since 2016, according to official data. The
province declared drug overdose a public health emergency that year.
The problem worsened with the COVID-19 pandemic, which disrupted illicit
drug supply chains as well support services, leaving people with more
toxic drugs that they used alone.
Preliminary data released Tuesday by the province showed there were
2,272 suspected illicit drug toxicity deaths in 2022, the second largest
annual number ever recorded, behind 2021, which had 34 more deaths.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government said in May it would let B.C.
decriminalize the drugs in a first-of-its-kind exemption in Canada. By
not prosecuting people carrying small amounts of drugs, the B.C.
government hopes to tackle the issue as a health problem rather than
through the criminal justice system.
The province says the exemption is intended to reduce the stigma
associated with substance use and to make it easier for people to
approach authorities for guidance.
Robert Schwartz, a professor at the University of Toronto, said the
measure was commendable as a first step, but that more needed to be done
to tackle the drug problem.
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Dave Hamm, an ethical substance peer
navigator with the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users (VANDU),
weighs a piece of rock cocaine as the province of British Columbia
decriminalized the possession of small amounts of cocaine,
methamphetamine, MDMA and opioids like heroin, fentanyl and
morphine, in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada January 31, 2023. REUTERS/Jennifer Gauthier
"The problem that we have with these
substances is that we have a huge, illicit supply that's causing
great harm," Schwartz said. "To really deal with this, we need a
comprehensive public health approach. This decriminalization, it's a
first step."
The drugs on the exemption list, which also includes fentanyl and
other opioids, remain illegal and the exemption from arrest is only
for possession of up to 2.5 grams for personal use.
"For many years we have had a de facto policy not to arrest people
for personal drug possession" but this change will mean fewer
seizures of small amounts of drugs, a spokesperson for the Vancouver
Police Department said.
Other Canadian communities are closely watching the pilot. They also
face a rise in drug overdose deaths.
Many health experts argue decriminalization would encourage drug
users to use them in safer spaces where they can access medical
care.
(Reporting by Ismail Shakil in Ottawa and Anna Mehler Paperny in
TorontoEditing by Deepa Babington)
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