Is Saskatoon ready for drug decriminalization? City, police officials say not yet - Action News
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Saskatoon

Is Saskatoon ready for drug decriminalization? City, police officials say not yet

City of Saskatoon and police officials discussing the decriminalization of small amounts of drugs Wednesday afternoon said they want to see more Saskatoon police data, and the results of a decriminalization pilot in B.C., before making changes here.

'We still charge people, although rarely, with simple possession,' says Saskatoon police chief

A man's hands holding a syringe are seen foreground, with his blurred reflection seen in a mirror in the background.
A man prepares heroin at the Insite safe injection clinic in Vancouver, B.C., in a 2011 file photo. B.C. has recently announced a drug decriminalization pilot project. Saskatoon city committee and Board of Police Commissioners members discussed decriminalization at a special joint meeting Wednesday afternoon. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

A committee room of City of Saskatoon and police officials discussing the decriminalization of small amounts of drugs Wednesday afternoon repeatedly returned to the question: would that be putting the cart before the horse?

Saskatoon police criminal investigation Supt.Patrick Nogier first raised that question at the special joint meeting of Saskatoon city committee and Board of Police Commissioners members, referring to the health and support services the city would need for substance users if the city chose to decriminalize some drug possession.

Mayor Charlie Clark also pointed to "some significant gaps right now in being able to respond to the crisis that is affecting addictions in our community."

He listed offlong wait lists for treatment, which issometimes designed to treat people addicted to alcohol rather than other substances.

In April, theSaskatoon Board of Police Commissioners reviewed reports on decriminalizationand decided to push the matterforward to Wednesday's meeting with thecity's governance and priorities committee.

A report authored by two University of Saskatchewanresearcherssubmitted to the police boardin Aprilsaid decriminalization wouldbenefit people who use drugsand society as a whole.

The decriminalization of simple possessionis one tool that can stabilize or reduce the harm for people living with addictions, researchersLori Hanson and Barbara Fornsslerwrote.

Saskatoon Mayor Charlie Clark, centre, says there are significant gaps in the city's health-care system that need to be filled if it is going to consider decriminalization. (Dayne Patterson/CBC)

The reportsaid there was evidence to suggest decriminalization"may effectively reduce drug toxicity deaths by reducing exposure to a toxic and unregulated drug supply."

Benefits would also include increased access to harm reduction services that can lessen disease transmission, better relationships with police, less work for police, and lower costs for thehealth and legal systems, the report said.

Last month, the federaland B.C. governmentsannounced a three-year pilot project the first of its kind in Canada that will allow people in B.C. who are 18 and olderto possess up to a cumulative 2.5 grams of opioids, cocaine, methamphetamineand MDMA, without risk ofarrest, chargeor seizure.

Officials at Wednesday's meeting favoured watching theB.C. pilot, hoping to gain some insight into the possibility of implementing it in Saskatoon.

"What I saw today was a real desire from our community to do what's best for our people who are suffering," said Saskatoon police Chief Troy Cooper.

"By examining what our current state is and examining the data we see out of B.C., we'll be able to make good decisions."

City should strive for decriminalization: report

The researchers' report recommends the city and police strive to make Saskatoon the first Canadian Prairie city where simple drug possession is decriminalized.

That would require an exemption from Health Canada. Until then, they suggested thecity could have law enforcement officers refrain from imposing criminal charges on peoplefound with a personal amount of illegal drugs.

That'ssomething Cooper says officers are already doing in Saskatoon, in a "de facto" decriminalization.

"We still charge people, although rarely, with simple possession," he said, noting charges are often only sought in extenuating circumstances, like when the person has an outstanding warrant.

Saskatoon police Chief Troy Cooper says it doesn't make sense for a municipality to make a policy change that lies at the federal level. (Don Somers/CBC)

Typically, officers avoid the charges, and when they are laid, they are withdrawn nearly 80 per cent of the time, he said.

The police force is expected to bring more statistics to the table in the fall, considering what kind of charges the police are laying, how often they're laid and how they play out.

At that point, the city will have a chance to consider B.C.'s experienceand the Saskatoon policedata.

Sask. government not supportive of policy

The Saskatchewan government said earlier this month that it would not pursue apolicy like B.C.'s.

Clark said lacking that alignment from all levels of government "makes it very difficult to effectively respond to what's going on in the community."

"We have work to do to get all the parties working together," but can learn from B.C.'s experience in the meantime, he said.

Cooper said it doesn't make sense for a municipality to make policy changes, and suggested Saskatoon's decriminalization lies in Ottawa's hands.

Hanson and Fornssler's report said that"global evidence clearly shows that drug prohibition does not reduce drug use, and decriminalization does not increase drug use."

They alsowarned there are consequences to sticking with the status quo.

In that situation, current rates "of opioid poisoning deaths, HIV/AIDS in Saskatoon, incarceration rates, or disparities experienced by BIPOC in the city may worsen," they wrote.

They encouraged the formation of a multi-agency group to tackle harm reduction anddrug toxicity in the city, with decriminalization as one tool.

A report from Cooperthat includes localized statistics was also included in the agenda for Wednesday.

It, too, wasput forward to the board of police commissioners in April.

It concludedthat the evaluation ofevidence-based harm reduction strategies is best accomplished through post-secondary-based research proposals, and recommended the board consider the research report.

With files from Adam Hunter and David Shield