British Columbia·Photos

Downtown Eastside marchers mark Overdose Awareness Day

About 30 people, many dressed in black, marched along Hastings Street in Vancouver on Wednesday to mark Overdose Awareness Day and to remember the people who have been killed by drugs.

Demonstrators carried banners and a black casket down Hastings Street, an area hit hard by drug use

Demonstrators carry a black casket down Hastings Street on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside to mark International Overdose Awareness Day. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

About 30 people, many dressed in black, marched along Hastings Street in Vancouver on Wednesday to mark International Overdose Awareness Day and to remember the people who have been killed by drugs.

The demonstrators walked in the rain with banners and a black casket to represent those who have died.

At times, there was solemn drumming and a man with a megaphone called out to people on the sidewalk, encouraging them to join the march.

"We need safer consumption sites, and we need options in our treatments. That's the two major things," said Al Fowler, president of the B.C. Association of People on Methadone (BCAPOM), which organized the event along with the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users (VANDU.).

Al Fowler, president of the B.C. Association of People on Methadone, has used opioids for seven years. "It’s terrible. It’s terrible. You’ve got no get up and go," he said of methadose. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Fowler, who has been using methadone for seven years, said opioid-dependent drug users need alternative treatments to suit different users.

"Your doctor should just wean you off that particular drug, just don't drop you off and throw you on methadone. You should be weaned properly from those drugs," he said.

"If a person's drug of choice was whatever, then they should be able to — you know, maybe that's the one that would work for them to wean 'em off, you know."

Marchers carry a banner on Hastings Street on Wednesday. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

"It's terrible, it's terrible. You've got no get up and go," Fowler said of methadone.

"It's — it's terrible. It doesn't help people ... get them energetic. You get your dose once a day. It's not working you know? There's other ways. There's other drugs."

Fowler and the marchers also called for an expanded network of supervised injection and drug consumption sites across the province.

A needle floats in the gutter on Hastings Street in Vancouver on Wednesday. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Follow Rafferty Baker on Twitter: @raffertybaker