B.C.'s toxic drug crisis has changed a lot since 2017 — but B.C. NDP's policies have not, say advocates
CBC
Advocates say the lack of progress on a safe supply of drugs in B.C. — and a fixation on treating addiction instead — is in keeping with the NDP's approach since they came into power in 2017, and hindering any efforts to stop the deaths.
The province makes no mention of safe supply in its 2022/23 budget, focusing only on the ruling B.C. NDP's expansion of addiction treatment in response to the toxic drug crisis that claimed thousands of lives last year.
"Our government is tackling [the poisoned drug crisis] head on with the largest investment in mental health and addictions services in B.C.'s history," said Finance Minister Selina Robinson in her budget presentation on Tuesday.
She also said the province has applied for a federal exemption to decriminalize possession of drugs, which has not yet been granted, and invested in providing safe supply to deal with B.C.'s death toll from the toxic drug supply, which has been the worst in the country.
The main plank of the province's approach continues to be addiction treatment however, with Robinson touting "hundreds" of new beds being built province-wide for those experiencing drug addiction.
Mark Tyndall, professor at the University of British Columbia and founder of safe supply advocacy project MySafeSociety, says the policies enacted by the NDP in the last five years have done little to curb overdose deaths.
"We're in a totally different situation where people are buying drugs that are very toxic and unpredictable and killing them," he told CBC News.
"Waiting until the NDP government, or any government, builds a functional addiction system is way too little, way too late for most people."
Karen Ward, drug policy advisor with the City of Vancouver, says the province's current safe supply program does not reach enough people, and that proposed decriminalization will not come fast enough for those currently at risk of overdose.
"We must replace the supply entirely because it's not going to get better on its own," she said.
"If we're going to condemn people in the future to this, to thousands of deaths a year, because we don't want to change the policy, we don't want to actually try."
Tuesday's budget includes $10 million of funding across three years for the Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions, headed by Sheila Malcolmson, to build more complex care housing for those experiencing drug addiction.
The incremental funding approach is remarkably similar to programs announced in years past, including by Judy Darcy, Malcolmson's predecessor and B.C.'s first addictions minister.