British Columbia

Richmond won't seek approval for drug consumption site: mayor

Richmond mayor Malcolm Brodie says the city will not be seeking approval for a supervised drug consumption site, two weeks after council voted in favour of asking health authorities to look into a site at the city's hospital.

Discussion about site that raised community backlash is now 'closed,' Malcolm Brodie says

A woman wearing a facemask holds up a sign that reads 'No Drug Consumption Site in Richmond'.
Demonstrators against the proposed supervised consumption site are pictured outside of Richmond City Hall on Feb. 13. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Two weeks after council in Richmond, B.C., voted in favour of asking health authorities to look into the possibility of a supervised drug consumption site at the city's hospital, the mayor has said the city will no longer be seeking approval for such a facility. 

During a council meeting on Monday evening, Mayor Malcolm Brodie said the resolution made by council did not state the city would establish a consumption site, and that only Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH) has the ability to do this, with approval from Health Canada. 

VCH has said it is not considering a standalone supervised consumption site in Richmond.

"The discussion on whether there will be a supervised consumption site in Richmond is closed," Brodie said. 

"There will be no site and no further discussion by council on this matter."

WATCH | Mayor says consumption sites are health authority's responsibility: 

Richmond mayor declares discussion closed over supervised consumption site

9 months ago
Duration 2:14
Malcolm Brodie read a two-minute statement to council describing why plans for a supervised consumption site in his city would not proceed, while noting the confusion over what the site would actually do and who would be responsible for it.

However, Brodie said Richmond council will continue to look for ways to keep people safe. 

On Feb. 13,  Richmond city council voted 7–2 to approve the motion asking health authorities to explore the possibility of a supervised drug consumption site at Richmond General Hospital. The motion drew heated protests, and some residents criticized the lack of public consultation.

B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix has previously stated that the sites are an important tool in trying to limit deaths from toxic drugs.

However, on Feb. 14 VCH said that based on public health data, a site in the hospital wouldn't be the most appropriate. The health authority said standalone sites work best in communities where there is a significant concentration of people at risk, because people will not travel far for these services.

Of the more than 2,500 people who died of toxic drugs in B.C. in 2023, 26 were in Richmond.

With files from Joel Ballard and The Canadian Press