CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Vancouver safe-injection site supporters pleased by court decision

Court decision will keep Insite open until June 2009

Last Updated: Wednesday, May 28, 2008 | 2:59 PM PT

The Insite supervised injection facility in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside has been operating since September 2003.  The Insite supervised injection facility in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside has been operating since September 2003. (CBC)

Supporters are pleased about a B.C. Supreme Court decision regarding Insite, a supervised safe-injection facility in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, while critics are disappointed the bigger issues remain unresolved.

In a 60-page ruling Tuesday, Justice Ian Pitfield gave Insite an exemption from Canada's drug laws until the end of June 2009.

Certain sections of the federal Controlled Drugs and Substances Act are inconsistent with Section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the ruling says.

Ottawa had until June 30 this year to decide whether to extend the exemption it granted to allow Insite to remain open, but a group of addicts and the Portland Hotel Society, which runs the site, asked the court to intervene.

They argued the site should be the responsibility of the provincial government because it is a health-care facility.

Mark Townsend, director of the Portland Hotel Society, applauded the ruling as a triumph.

“It's a major victory, really — a judge for the first time in Canada has said that this project is about health care so the Controlled Substance and Drugs Act does not apply to it, so that is a major victory,” said Townsend.

Townsend said the ruling means it will be business as usual at the site for the next year.

The lawyer for the Portland Hotel Society said the judge recognized the site provides a necessary service to people battling addiction.

"The court ... affirmed the right of people with serious addictions to access the health care they need to deal with the addictions and the coincidental health affects of those addictions," Monique Pongracic-Speier said in an interview.

She added while the decision was based on the situation in the Downtown Eastside, it has implications across the country.

"So if the Parliament of Canada decides that it's not going to amend the laws ... then those laws are off the books," she said.

"They [supporters of the safe-injection site] don't want to see open-season on trafficking, and it would be my expectation that the federal government will update the laws."

Safe injection site seen as health clinic

Senior media relations officer Viviana Zanocco of the Coastal Health Authority, which runs the safe-injection site, said the "shooting gallery," as it is sometimes called, is supported by a wide range of politicians and police officers as a way to protect the health of addicts.

"Insite is just part of the continuum of heath treatment and health promotion for people who are addicted to drugs," Zanocco said.

While the health authority was reluctant to open a safe-injection site at first, people slowly came on board, she said.

"We started to look at the moral questions, the ethical questions, the financial implications of what [a safe injection site] might mean. It was something that gradually grew in acceptance," she said.

Zanocco said that no matter how much outreach they had in the community, there was a certain segment of addicts they weren't able to get to until Insite opened.

Vancouver police union president Tom Stamatakis said though he hasn't had time to review the decision in its entirety, he was disappointed. The department supports the safe-injection site but the police union does not.

Stamatakis said there are many outstanding issues with the program, including that addicts may commit crimes to get the drugs they do at Insite.

The court decision will delay a more in-depth look at those issues, he said.

New Democrat Jenny Kwan, the MLA for Vancouver-Mount Pleasant, where Insite is located, has introduced a private member's bill that calls for the designation of safe injection sites as health facilities.

"This decision is a huge victory for people in our community, for people who are marginalized in the community, who are struggling day by day to survive, and this decision is the foundation on which I think we can build on," Kwan said.

"We can bring in legislation that will make permanent supervised injection facilities in British Columbia."

Drug addicts like smokers, alcoholics

In his ruling, Pitfield wrote that with substances such as alcohol and smoking, society doesn't condemn addicts but provides a range of health-care services to help manage the addiction, and he can't see why it should be different when it comes to dealing with addiction to harder drugs.

The ruling says denial of access to the site "amounts to a condemnation of the consumption that led to addiction in the first place, while ignoring the resulting illness."

"While there is nothing to be said in favour of the injection of controlled substances that leads to addiction, there is much to be said against denying addicts health-care services that will ameliorate the effects of their condition," he wrote.

With files from Canadian Press
  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 
 

Related

British Columbia Headlines

Man in Motion lights up crowd in Richmond, B.C. Video
Wheelchair marathoner Rick Hansen — known as the Man in Motion from his worldwide fundraising tour — lit the Olympic cauldron in Richmond, B.C., in front of a crowd of thousands Tuesday night.
Explosive chemicals not stolen after all: RCMP
Potentially explosive ammonium nitrate fertilizer that appeared to disappear on the eve of the Vancouver Olympics was not stolen, the RCMP say.
Ludwig search warrant cites phone records, letter to EnCana Video
CBC has obtained a copy of the search warrant executed last month on Wiebo Ludwig's farm near Hythe, Alta., in connection with the investigation into the bombing of natural gas pipeline sites in B.C.
Canucks struck down by Lightning
Martin St. Louis had two goals and one assist as the Tampa Bay Lightning beat the Vancouver Canucks 3-1 on Tuesday night.
Vancouver tap water vies with Olympic sponsor
Vancouver has started a campaign to encourage Olympic tourists to drink the region's tap water instead of buying bottled water, creating a potential conflict with one of the Games' biggest sponsors.

Canada Headlines

Health costs push Alberta budget deficit to $4.75B Video
Alberta's Progressive Conservative government is projecting a record $4.75-billion budget deficit and planning cuts in many departments while increasing health-care spending.
Trenton colonel's charges spur cold case review Video
The 2001 slaying of a Nova Scotia woman at CFB Trenton in eastern Ontario is among the cases being re-examined after murder charges were laid against Col. Russell Williams.
Neighbours stunned by arrest of Col. Williams
Ottawa resident Michael Gennis was stunned when he found out his new neighbour, Col. Russell Williams, had been charged with killing two women in eastern Ontario.
Olympic spirit will launch B.C. reforms: throne speech
The B.C. government says it will use the province's post-Olympics momentum to drive changes that include offering tax breaks to families with children, reforming education and lobbying Ottawa to amend "Byzantine bureaucratic practices."
Vancouver tap water vies with Olympic sponsor
Vancouver has started a campaign to encourage Olympic tourists to drink the region's tap water instead of buying bottled water, creating a potential conflict with one of the Games' biggest sponsors.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Trenton colonel's charges spur cold case review Video
The 2001 slaying of a Nova Scotia woman at CFB Trenton in eastern Ontario is among the cases being re-examined after murder charges were laid against Col. Russell Williams.
Health costs push Alberta budget deficit to $4.75B Video
Alberta's Progressive Conservative government is projecting a record $4.75-billion budget deficit and planning cuts in many departments while increasing health-care spending.
Ottawa to appeal injection site ruling Video
The federal government is asking the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal a lower court ruling that sanctioned Vancouver's supervised drug injection site.
Afghan avalanches kill 157 people
At least 157 people have been killed in a series of avalanches that blocked a mountain pass north of Kabul, trapping hundreds more in their snowbound vehicles, Afghan officials said Wednesday.
Haitian man pulled from rubble Video
A 28-year-old man has been pulled from rubble in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, claiming to have been trapped there since the massive earthquake on Jan. 12.