sa国际传媒

Skip to content

B.C. drug advocates cautiously optimistic about decriminalization

But there remains concerns about how possession will be enforced
31713601_web1_230202-KWS-Decriminalization_1
A person in Nelson holds a bag with 2.5 grams of methamphetamine. Possession of that amount of certain types of drugs, including meth, will be decriminalized in B.C. as of Jan. 31. Photo: Tyler Harper

David Dukhart eats his breakfast in downtown Nelson on a cold morning. He had a difficult night sleeping outside, the temperatures dropped to -16 C, and right now his focus is on staying warm and filling his belly.

The 58-year-old, who is homeless, has used drugs since he was just 16. He started out with cocaine, and as the years and health problems added up he now mostly relies on methadone and Ritalin, medication used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Dukhart also takes fentanyl, the drug that is largely responsible for more than 11,000 deaths in British Columbia since the provincial toxic drug crisis began in 2016.

As of Jan. 31, B.C. will decriminalize personal possession of up to 2.5 grams of illicit opioids, crack and powder cocaine, methamphetamine and MDMA.

Dukhart shrugs at the mention of decriminalization. He doesnsa国际传媒檛 know what, if anything, it will mean for him. But the crisis, he says, cansa国际传媒檛 get much worse.

sa国际传媒淎nythingsa国际传媒檚 better than the way it was. Itsa国际传媒檚 getting better, itsa国际传媒檚 changing.sa国际传媒

Federal Addictions Minister Carolyn Bennett and her B.C. counterpart Jennifer Whiteside described the three-year pilot program during a news conference Monday (Jan. 30) as a historic step in addressing the crisis. The BC Coroners Service said Tuesday that 2,272 people died due to illicit drug toxicity in 2022.

READ MORE:

Although harm-reduction advocates are cautiously optimistic that decriminalization will address the stigma faced by substance users, they expressed concerns about how police will enforce the new rules.

Provincial officials said training launched for B.C. police in December included a webinar focused on how to identify 2.5 grams of various substances. The RCMP has made that training mandatory, but not all of B.C.sa国际传媒檚 13 municipal forces have followed suit.

An addictions ministry spokesperson said two-thirds of B.C. officers have completed the training, which relies on police making judgement calls about the amount of drugs a person possesses based on observation. Police will also provide pamphlets with information about local harm-reduction services, and later this spring take further training that emphasizes how they interact with users.

The addictions ministry declined a request by Black Press Media to make police training materials public due to sa国际传媒渟ecurity and privacy concerns.sa国际传媒

Garth Mullins, an organizer with the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users and host of The Crackdown podcast, doesnsa国际传媒檛 believe decriminalization will lead to trust between substance users and law enforcement. The less interaction, the better, he said.

sa国际传媒淒ecriminalization for drug users is about no more cops and jails and courts. No more getting fired for your job because you have a charge on you, no more getting your kids taken by the state because you have a charge on you. Itsa国际传媒檚 about freedom from criminal penalties.sa国际传媒

Stigma and safe supply

Tiffany Parton, executive director of the BC Association of Chiefs of Police, acknowledged the stigma of law enforcement is an obstacle and that there is a desire for change.

Possession charges, she added, have already been dropping annually. There were 876 British Columbians charged with possession under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act in 2021, which was down from 1,647 in 2020, according to Statistics Canada.

Parton believes law enforcement is ready to meet the new rules, but isnsa国际传媒檛 sure the province has enough adequate health services such as overdose prevention sites to pair with decriminalization.

sa国际传媒淭he big issue remains a health issue and theresa国际传媒檚 still resources that are required on the mental health and the complex care side. While we believe that we are ready, we are also still somewhat concerned that there are pieces on the other side that arensa国际传媒檛. So wesa国际传媒檒l have to navigate as we go.sa国际传媒

Vancouversa国际传媒檚 Overdose Prevention Society executive director Sarah Blyth said she hopes decriminalization also leads to a safe supply that includes drugs like heroin that has been tested for fentanyl.

B.C.sa国际传媒檚 safe supply program offers opioid agonist therapy drugs, or pharmaceutical alternatives such as methadone and suboxone, that are meant to be used along with a treatment program. But for not meeting userssa国际传媒 needs.

sa国际传媒淲e continue to be in an emergency,sa国际传媒 said Blyth. sa国际传媒淲e continue to lose people every day. It is continuously the saddest thing I could ever imagine to happen and it feels like these types of things shouldnsa国际传媒檛 happen in the world.sa国际传媒

The news conference led by Bennett and Whiteside did not include any speakers from drug user groups or front-line advocates, which Mullins criticized as tone deaf.

sa国际传媒淒ecriminalization is our domain. We fought for it for 25 years, itsa国际传媒檚 our demand. But they didnsa国际传媒檛 invite us to the press conference. They didnsa国际传媒檛 tell us what it was about or anything. They invited the cops. So we were spectators to the thing we fought for for a generation.sa国际传媒

There are few precedents for what B.C. is attempting.

Portugal, which decriminalized possession and use of illicit drugs in 2001, was mentioned by Bennett and Whiteside as an example where it has been effective. In the United States, Oregon decriminalized small amounts of all drugs in 2020.

But itsa国际传媒檚 too early to say how decriminalization in B.C. will be considered a success or failure by Health Canada in three years.

B.C. addictions ministry spokespeople said that data on health outcomes, interviews with users and public perception feedback will be provided to the federal government. Bennett and Whiteside later said there are plans for public website that will provide new data every three months.

If the federal government measures decriminalizationsa国际传媒檚 success by how many substance users are dying or receiving treatment, Mullins said, the pilot will likely be viewed as a failure.

sa国际传媒淯nless we do something real on safe supply, people are still going to be taking toxic drugs and overdosing and dying.sa国际传媒

READ MORE:

sa国际传媒

sa国际传媒

| tyler.harper@nelsonstar.com
Like us on and follow us on .



Tyler Harper

About the Author: Tyler Harper

Isa国际传媒檓 editor-reporter at the Nelson Star, where Isa国际传媒檝e worked since 2015.
Read more



(or

sa国际传媒

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }