Yaletown overdose prevention site relocated in Vancouver - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:42 AM | Calgary | -11.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Yaletown overdose prevention site relocated in Vancouver

VancouverCoastal Health said in a statement Wednesday that the site had officially opened at its new location on the 1000 block of Howe Street, though there is no signage.

Site relocated from Seymour Street to Howe Street after public safety concerns led to lease expiry last month

A man enters a door with a colourful mural that says 'Thomus Donaghy OPS.'
The previous site of the Yaletown overdose prevention site is seen on the intersection of Seymour Street and Helmcken Street. The site has now moved to Howe Street. (Justine Boulin/CBC)

Vancouver Coastal Health has announced the new location of an overdose prevention site located in the city's downtown core.

The health authority said in a statement Wednesday that theThomus Donaghy OPS has officially opened at the 1000 block of Howe Street,behind a social housing complex, though there is no public signage for the site.

Its previous location first opened in March 2021at the intersection of Seymour Street and Helmcken Street,but itslease expired last month.

At the time, the City of Vancouver decidednot to renew the lease with the health authority, with councillorssaying that public safety concerns and the congregation of people outside the site made it unsuitable.

The health authority sayssince it opened in March 2021, daily visits to the site are up 150 per cent, and it has reversed more than 200 drug overdoses.

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim said in a news release that the city was not consulted on the relocation of the site to Howe Street, and the site should have been moved to the nearby St. Paul's Hospital instead.

Sim says despite his surprise, he appreciates thatseveral factorsmust be consideredfor the location ofoverdose prevention sites.

"We look forward to learning more fromVancouverCoastal Health about how they plan to operate this site in a way that provides these important services while mitigating impacts onVancouverneighbourhoods like Yaletown," Sim saidin the release.

A man wearing glasses is seen in profile.
Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim says he is looking forward to working with VCH to mitigate risk to the Yaletown neighbourhood. (Nav Rahi/CBC)

Vancouver Coastal Health says the new site will allow its clients and residents increased privacy.

"The new OPS will be supported by security, sidewalk management, litter and needle sweeps, and community outreach teams, in addition to other supports, to ensure thehealthand safety of the people it serves as well as people in the surrounding area," the statement reads.

The Thomus Donaghy OPS is named after an Overdose Prevention Society volunteerwho was killed by a client.

Public health data shows that the Vancouver City Centre local health area, whichincludes the Yaletown neighbourhood, has the second-highest rate of toxic drug deathsin Vancouver.

With files from The Canadian Press