Drug users want government to end review of overdose prevention sites

More than 60 people died from overdoses in Ottawa in 2017

Image | overdose awareness day

Caption: The shoes of people who have died from overdoses were displayed at an event marking International Overdose Awareness Day in Ottawa. (CBC)

Drug consumers in Ottawa are calling on the provincial government to end its review of overdose prevention sites.
Dozens of people rallied Friday outside the Human Rights Monument on Elgin Street for International Overdose Awareness Day, calling for better health care for drug users, more overdose prevention sites and programs, and more 24/7 supervised injection sites.
Since coming into power, Premier Doug Ford's PC government has put several approved overdose prevention sites on pause while the government studies the issue.
Last year, more than 60 people died from overdoses in Ottawa.
Four people who have used drugs shared their thoughts on the Ontario government's review of provincially funded overdose prevention sites.

Jennifer Bigelow

Image | Jennifer Bigelow Aug. 31/18

(Kimberley Molina/CBC)

"I think it's the craziest thing. Do they not have a friggin' brain in their head? Can they not open their eyes and see what's happening on our city streets all over, on sidewalks, behind any kind of gate? People are dying. People are overdosing and dying," she said.
"But my god, what if tomorrow it's your grandchild, your niece, your brother? Do you really know? Because addicts can hide their addiction very, very well until they can't hide it anymore, until they're dead."

Kelly Florence

Image | Kelly Florence Aug. 31/18

(Kimberley Molina/CBC)

"I think it's ridiculous ... there's still people dying at huge rates. It may be cut back a bit, but that's because of the safe injection sites. That's because of the naloxone kits. So, to pull funding for [overdose prevention sites], it has about as much thought put into that as they did when they took Oxycontin off the shelf."

Catherine Hacksel

Image | Catherine Hacksel Aug. 31/18

(Martin Weaver/CBC)

"It's completely unethical. It's state violence, essentially. I mean look at Parkdale ... I don't frankly understand how that's legal to block a service when you know that there's death happening in that community where people may have wanted to access an overdose prevention site."

Billy Jean Mardon

Image | Billy Jean Mardon Aug. 31/18

(Kimberley Molina/CBC)

"My first time I went into the hospital, I was still on methadone, and it took like three days for me to get my methadone in hospital. So, if I hadn't have been finding ways to get heroin delivered to me, I would have been withdrawing. I don't know why it takes so long to get my medicine … they should have places to get clean stuff at the hospital too because that was another problem I ran into."

Media Video | (not specified) : 'These are our brothers, our sisters, our mothers:' Drugs don't discriminate, former addict says

Caption: Former drug user and peer support worker Sean LeBlanc asked past and present users to join him on stage in an effort to eliminate the stigma around drug use.

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.