Advocates hope rookie minister acts quickly to tackle a wave of overdose deaths - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:52 AM | Calgary | -13.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Advocates hope rookie minister acts quickly to tackle a wave of overdose deaths

Ya'ara Saks, Canada's new minister of mental health and addictions, inherits a complex portfolio andan opioid crisis that has only gotten worse in almost every year since 2016.

More than 36,000 people in Canada have died of overdoses between 2016 and 2022

A woman wearing glasses stands in the House of Commons.
Liberal MP Yaara Saks, the new minister of mental health and addictions, stands in the House of Commons on April 29, 2022. (Patrick Doyle/The Canadian Press)

Ya'ara Saks, Canada's new minister of mental health and addictions, inherits a complex portfolio andan opioid crisis that has only gotten worse in almost every year since 2016.

Advocates and addictions experts say they would like to see the new minister take a holistic approach tothe crisis and act swiftlytochampion and expand harm reduction policies.

More than 36,000 people in Canadadied ofopioid overdoses between 2016 and 2022 roughly 20 people per day in 2022 alone.

Saks isa relatively new MP she was elected in a 2020 by-election. She'staking over a relatively new file that wascreated in 2021. This is herfirst ministerial position.

Saks said she was "honoured" to be appointed ministerand vowed to tackle the crisis.

"We will use every tool at our disposal to work with our partners to deliver services when and where they are needed to end this crisis," she said, in a statement to CBC.

Dr. Paxton Bach, an addictions specialist and co-medical director of the B.C. Centre on Substance Use (BCCSU), said he hopes Saks will be a"strong and outspoken advocate for the type of system change that we need in order to turn the tide."

While Bach says some progress has been made, more needs to be done at every level of government.

"Collectively, we are all clearly failing. We are failing because the numbers continue to get worse," he said. Hecalled on Saks to bring various levels of government and community groups together to address the crisis.

WATCH |She survived addiction. Now she's helping others

She survived addiction and human trafficking. Now shes on the front lines helping others

1 year ago
Duration 6:45
Vanessa Tookenay is in the fight against the homelessness and addiction crisis in Thunder Bay, Ont. - but she only recently escaped life on the streets herself. Her story is one of hope but also a call to action.

In January, the B.C. government was granted an exemption from Ottawa allowing it todecriminalize the possession of small amounts of drugs for a three-year period. The aim of the pilot project is to reduce drug-related arrests anddirect people towardhealth supports.

The exemption "is a first step, but the fact that you can be criminalized elsewhere in the country makes no sense to me," said Janet Butler McPhee, co-executive director of the HIV Legal Network.

Toronto made a similar request to decriminalize simple possession in January 2022;it has yet to be approved. In May, the city revised its request andaskedfor a model that goes further than the one in B.C.

Saks will now be responsible for overseeing Toronto's request and possibly others. A briefing note prepared for the previous minister last year suggests another 55 municipalities have expressed interest in decriminalization.

Butler-McPhee says that while she hopes to see decriminalization extended to other jurisdictions, it's only one piece of the puzzle.

"We need someone who understands that it's not going to be just one magic silver bullet," she said. "It's a whole suite of things that need to happen and those things need to happen quickly."

Budget setaside millions to address crisis

Advocates have been pushing for an expansion of harm-reduction projects such assafe supply and supervised consumption sites.

The spring federal budget committed nearly $360 million over the next five years to addressing the opioid crisis including $144 million for community-led projects such as safe consumption sites and safe supply programs. Another $4.6 million is earmarked for Health Canada to "streamline" the authorization of new safe consumption and drug-checking sites.

Safe supply programs are meant to offer people who use drugs an alternative to toxic street productswhich can be laced with deadly opioids such as fentanyl. Of the more than 7,300 overdose deaths that happened last year, 81 per cent involved fentanyl, according to data from the Public Health Agency of Canada.

A layout of photos of people on a table.
Pictures of people who died of drug overdoses are displayed during a Moms Stop The Harm memorial on the seventh anniversary of the opioid public health emergency in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, April 14, 2023. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Guy Felicella, a peer clinical adviser for the BCCSU, says he would like to see new safe supply programs that are less bureaucratic and allow people access without a prescription.

"We can't prescribe our way out of this crisis," he said. "We need another pathway outside of the medical system."

Petra Schulz, co-founder of the advocacy group Moms Stop The Harm, agreeswith Felicella.

"We need programs that are outside the medicalized system. So non-medical safe supply through compassion clubs or other models," she said.

A politician gestures to his left while speaking in a legislature.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre rises during question period on June 16, 2023 in Ottawa. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Saks's appointment comes as the Conservatives have been attacking the federal Liberals'response to overdose deaths.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has claimed safe supply and consumption policies only contribute to the crisis. In May, he put forward a motion calling on the government to halt all programs providing non-toxic drugs to those suffering from addictions and to instead redirect funding to treatment services.

Bach says that whilemore money should be invested in treatment, it shouldn't be viewed as a trade-off with harm reduction.

"If we're having that debate, thenwe've already lost. We're already off course," he said.

"We must invest in this entire spectrum of care for people who are using substances. It's critical. Anything else, any other discussion is a distraction from the system that we need to be building."

Saks says she intends to work across party lines to address the crisis.

"I firmly believe this issue is non-partisan and I intend to build bridges to help Canadians," she said in a statement.