“It’s so heartbreaking, just lying on the pavement comatose. We’re kidding ourselves if we think that somehow they’re going to get the help they need [voluntarily]. (Times Colonist)
Politicians and non-profit leaders responded this week to a national story pointing to Pandora Avenue in Victoria as one of the largest open-air drug markets in Western Canada.
The Globe and Mail feature on fentanyl — the opioid responsible for most drug deaths in BC — painted the 900-block of Pandora as stinking of urine and littered with trash, lined with semi-unconscious people and shuttered businesses, and so marked by violence and chaos that area condo owners can’t sell their way out.
In response to that portrayal of the underbelly of postcard-perfect Victoria — twice voted Condé Nast’s No. 1 small city in the world — BC Conservative Leader John Rustad in question period Monday demanded treatment-focused housing that “bans these deadly drugs and restores law and order to communities like Victoria" ...
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