Skip to main content

“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind.” ~~ John G. Diefenbaker

Time has run out for research and discussion. It is time to take action and do everything we can to turn this drug poisoning crisis around

February 9th, 2022 (Public Safety and Solicitor General): ... Time has run out for research and discussion. It is time to take action.

 

August 31st, 2021: “On International Overdose Awareness Day ...we remember loved ones lost to this terrible poisoned drug crisis ... today’s report from the BC Coroner’s Service shows just how devastating it’s been ... We will do everything we can to turn this drug poisoning crisis around



Here’s a sobering thought ... i
llicit drug toxicity is the leading cause of unnatural death in British Columbia -- second only to cancers in terms of years of life lost (Public Safety and Solicitor General). In just the first 6 months of 2022 there were 1,095 drug deaths recorded – 182.5 per month. In the last full year of data (2021) there were 2,224 deaths – 185.3 / month)

 

Now consider this.

 

On average there are around 182 motor vehicle occupants killed in crashes across BC every year (BC Injury research and prevention unit - https://www.injuryresearch.bc.ca/injury-priorities/transport-related-injuries/motor-vehicle-occupants).

 

Let me repeat that ... 182 deaths PER YEAR from motor vehicle crashes ... or basically the same number of British Columbians dying EVERY SINGLE MONTH from a toxic / poisoned drug supply.

 

And from 2012 to 2021 drug toxicity deaths topped TEN THOUSAND (10,579) – BC Coroners Service.

 

Month after month, year after year, hundreds of lives are lost, and what do we get from the BC NDP government ... from the Attorney General, the Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions, and from the Minter of Public Safety and Solicitor General?

 

Month after month all that gets churned out are ‘talking points’. Talking points, about what they are going to do. The Coroner, the Minister of Public Safety, and Minister of Mental Health and Addictions spew exactly the same words OVER and OVER again ... and if you don’t believe me, here are just 18 examples from over the past year and a half:

 

 

... These are devastating losses for families, friends, and loved ones ... We are working hard to build a system of mental-health and substance-use care ...

 

... we’ve been working urgently to build a system of mental-health and substance-use care that works for everyone ... There is more to do

 

... this new data that will help inform our ongoing work to confront the toxic drug and housing crises from every angle ...

 

... these are devastating losses for families, friends, communities and loved ones ... We are working hard to build a system of mental-health and substance-use care ...

 

... our government is tackling the toxic drug crisis and working to build up a continuum of mental-health and substance-use care ...

 

... we’ve been working urgently to build a system of mental-health and substance-use care that works for everyone ... we continue to expand much-needed harm-reduction services ... There is more to do ...

 

... every person who died this year due to the poisoned drug supply was special and important and represents a deep loss to our communities ... We continue to confront this emergency from every angle, making the large, systemic changes necessary to turn the tide on this crisis ...

 

... despite unprecedented work to turn the tide on the crisis, this trend tragically did not continue in May ... We are deepening our investment in people and innovative solutions to turn this crisis around ...

 

... There is no magic bullet to end the drug poisoning crisis ... These actions are vital as we build a comprehensive system of mental health and addictions care that includes harm reduction and treatment and recovery ...

 

... My heart is with the families and friends who are grieving ... Our government remains committed to doing what it takes to turn the tide on this crisis ... there is more work to do, and we won’t stop until we turn this crisis around ...

 

... 174 lives lost in February due to the toxic drug crisis. My thoughts and sympathies go out to all the families who have lost a loved one ... We know there is more to do, and we won’t stop working until we turn this crisis around ...

 

... ... report confirms that the work underway by our government is crucial to saving lives and ending the toxic drug crisis and that more work is needed ... There’s much more to do, and we won’t stop working until we turn this crisis around

 

... we must do more to combat the illicit toxic drug crisis, and our government is working hard every day to end this public-health emergency ...

 

... ... There is more to do along the entire continuum of care to end the poisoned drug crisis ... We won’t stop working until we turn this crisis around ...

 

... It is long past time to end the chaos and devastation in our communities resulting from the flourishing illicit drug market ...

 

... The number of people who died from the toxic drug supply last year is unacceptable and we must do more to prevent this tragic loss of life ...

 

... we continue to do everything we can to turn this drug poisoning crisis around ... these measures will save lives. And we are committed to do much more until no person is left behind ...


...
government will continue expanding life-saving resources across the continuum of care, from prescribed safer supply to more treatment beds ... we are deepening our investment in people and innovative solutions to turn this crisis around ...

 

 

Just six days ago (November 1st, 2022) the Minister of Mental Health and Addictions, Sheila Malcolmson, released the following statement regarding the Select Standing Committee on Health’s report on the toxic drug crisis – and ONCE AGAIN, we saw the same words being spoken:

 

“The poisoned drug supply is taking the lives of our loved ones ... We must end this tragic loss of life ... recommendations from the Special Committee on Health on the illicit drug toxicity and overdose crisis reaffirm the tools our government is using to tackle the public-health emergency in BC ... there’s more to do to tackle this public-health emergency. We will not stop working until we turn this crisis around and people in our province can get the help they need.”

 


AND NOW TODAY comes the latest in monthly output from the Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions. In part the Ministry’s release to the media stated:

 

“In September, 171 people were lost to the toxic drug crisis. So many have been profoundly affected by this terrible crisis ... we are determined to end this tragic loss of life ...

 

... Our government is making historic investments to build a system of mental-health and addiction care from the ground up ...

 

We won’t stop working until all British Columbians can get the help they need, when they need it.”



It is long past obvious that the work this government is doing is NOT working, and while they have been determined (as they say) to end this crisis and loss of life, it’s not happening.

 

Instead of a patchwork of services being added across the province in dribs and drabs, communities that have been desperately asking for access to new drug treatment and recovery options, and mental health services, should be receiving them as soon as they can be rolled out.

 

IT’S A FACT:

 

Recovery beds, counselling and mental health services need to be available immediately upon someone’s decision they are ready to accept them.

These services need to be made available in areas well away from areas of rampant drug use and availability – and that includes clean and safe housing during and after receiving services.

 

Opportunity for education and training, so that individuals have the best chances for success, need to be provided.

 

Long-term follow up counselling and psychiatric care, to prevent a relapse, need to also be readily available.

 

This IS what’s needed to provide an ... investment in people and innovative solutions to turn this crisis around ... a system of mental-health and addiction care from the ground up ... the help they need, when they need it ... to end the chaos and devastation ... and to ... continue to confront this emergency from every angle.

 

In other words, all of the things this NDP government has been talking about doing for years.

 

Today’s latest BC Coroners report on illicit drug toxicity deaths for September 2022 told us what we’ve been hearing over and over again, as another 171 lives were lost to the toxic drug crisis.

 

How many more of these announcements are we prepared to see and hear before we demand long overdue action be taken?

 

Time has run out for research and discussion. It is time to act and do everything we can to turn this drug poisoning crisis around.

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

'Very good news' that Supreme Court will hear B.C. mineral claims case, Eby says

The BC government needs clarity from the Supreme Court of Canada on a landmark mineral rights claim, Premier David Eby says. But the lawyer representing the challenger says that they would have preferred the province respect the lower court's decision. Eby said Thursday it is very good news that the court will hear its appeal of a ruling that found the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the provincial mineral claims regime are "inconsistent." The BC Court of Appeal ruled in December that the provincial Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, or DRIPA, should be "properly interpreted" to incorporate the UN declaration into the laws of B.C. with immediate legal effect. That ruling set off the appeal from the province amid concerns that it could cause economic uncertainty ... CLICK HERE for the full story 

EBY OFFSIDE WITH NATIONAL INTEREST AS CARNEY AND SMITH BUILD BC'S ECONOMIC FUTURE WITHOUT HIM ~~ BC Conservatives

IMAGE CREDIT :  CBC News   Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced a landmark agreement today committing Ottawa to designate a new pipeline to BC's west coast as a project of national interest by October 1, 2026, with construction approval targeted for September 1, 2027. The deal pairs the pipeline with a new industrial carbon pricing framework and a fall 2027 construction start. British Columbia, the province where the pipeline ends, where the jobs would land, and where the export terminal would be built, was nowhere at the table. "This is a nation-building deal, and the BC NDP have been locked out of the room," said Trevor Halford, Interim Leader of the Official Opposition.  "While the Prime Minister and the Premier of Alberta were doing the hard work of growing the Canadian economy, the NDP is on the sidelines calling this pipeline a 'fiction' and an 'energy vampire.'  He chose petulance over partnership, and now BC ...

Kamloops - North Thompson BC Conservative MLA Ward Stamer speaks to Bill 20 — K’ómoks Treaty Act

The following is a condensed version of Kamloops – North Thompson MLA Ward Stamer’s remarks, to the BC Legislature, on the afternoon of Tuesday May 19th : I rise today to continue remarks on Bill 20, the K’ómoks treaty, and to address what I believe are some of the most important constitutional, democratic and governance concerns facing this Legislature today. At the centre of this debate are two major issues. First, unresolved overlapping territorial boundaries tied to this treaty process. And second, the growing legal and political consequences arising from the provincial government’s implementation of the Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, more commonly known as DRIPA. Much of the government’s defence on DRIPA rests upon references to the United Nations declaration on the rights of Indigenous Peoples, commonly known as UNDRIP. And this is where we must begin having a more honest and mature conversation in this province. UNDRIP was never originally designed to function ...

Labels

Show more