Kitchener-Waterloo

Green Leader Elizabeth May touts party platform at stop in Kitchener

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May was in Kitchener Monday afternoon just hours after releasing her party's platform for the federal election.

May calls for safe supply of drugs and harm reduction sites to curb opioid crisis

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May visited House of Friendship in Kitchener on Monday, hours after releasing her party's platform for the federal election. (Kate Bueckert/CBC)

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May was in Kitchener, Ont. Monday afternoon just hours after releasing her party's platform for the federal election.

"Housing is a right," she told a group gathered in a room at House of Friendship before touring the social and affordable housing the agency provides. 

She said social housing is needed to help people get out of addictions and move on with their lives. She said that's why her platform has an expanded housing strategy.

She said there's a need for a safe supply of drugs and harm reduction sites where people can use them. These are interim measures, May said, and added they're necessary because people can't trust street drugs that could potentially be laced with fentanyl.

May campaigned Monday afternoon with Kitchener Centre candidate Mike Morrice, who is facing Liberal incumbent Raj Saini, Conservative Stephen Woodworth, the NDP's Andrew Moraga, People's Party of Canada candidate Patrick Bernier and Ellen Papenburg, candidate for the Animal Protection Party of Canada.

May was scheduled to be at a rally in Guelph Monday evening.

May will join CBC Kitchener-Waterloo's The Morning Edition Tuesday at 7:10 a.m.