Windsor's health unit ends tenancy on former SafePoint building - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 03:47 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Windsor

Windsor's health unit ends tenancy on former SafePoint building

Though the treatment and consumption service has been closed for nearly a year, the health unit said Friday it will officially end its tenancy of the building.

SafePoint has been closed since January 2024

A building with a sign that reads, 'SafePoint.'
SafePoint opened Wednesday for the first time. The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit and Hotel Dieu Grace Healthcare did not comment on how the first day went or how many people used the site. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

The localhealth unit will officially be cutting ties with the former SafePoint building in downtown Windsor.

Though the treatment and consumption service has been closed for nearly a year, the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit (WECHU) saidin a news release Friday that it will officially end its tenancy of the building.

"Direction provided by the Ministry of Health has been clear that the use of this space for its intended purpose will no longer be possible with the introduction of new systems and supports for those struggling with addiction, homelessness, and mental health issues," said Ken Blanchette, CEO of the health unit, in a statement.

The site, located at Wyandotte Street East and Goyeau Street,has been closed since January. The province had previously announced a review of all consumption sites after a woman died in a shooting outside one in Toronto last year.

WATCH: Here's why WECHU ended the site's lease

Here's why Windsor's health unit ended its drug consumption and treatment site lease

21 days ago
Duration 1:45
The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit has ended its lease on the building that housed SafePoint, which was the region's first ever supervised drug consumption and treatment site. CBC's Jennifer La Grassa explains why the service is no longer around.

At the time, SafePoint's provincial application was stalled. The health unit had been funding it through its own budget but could not sustain the cost.

Over the summer, Sylvia Jones, minister of health, announced the governmentwould ban sites within 200 metres of a school or daycare which SafePoint's location on Wyandotte Street is and not approve any new sites.

Instead, the ministry announced hundreds of millions for new Homelessness and Addiction Recovery Treatment (HART) hubs. Windsor is actively pursuing one of these hubs.

The health unit is "actively involved" in the HART hub application, Blanchette said and is committed "to enhancing harm reduction programs and supporting people in our community who use substances."