Bill on forced addiction treatment will include evaluation process, minister says
CBC
New Brunswick's public safety minister says there'll be a medical evaluation process as part of new legislation to force some people with severe addictions into treatment against their will.
Kris Austin told reporters that the bill will "absolutely, 100 per cent" include a process involving medical professionals, family members and others.
"We're not looking to arbitrarily just drag people into some sort of incarceration," Austin said Wednesday.
"It would be more than simply the minister of public safety to determine that, or even a police officer. This is something that the medical profession really has to have the final say on, whether treatment is warranted."
Premier Blaine Higgs's comments on Tuesday about the pending bill, the Compassionate Intervention Act, sparked criticism from housing advocates and addiction experts.
Higgs mentioned the bill when answering questions about two people who died in a fire at a tent encampment for homeless people in Saint John.
Health Minister Bruce Fitch acknowledged that he didn't know whether the proposed legislation would have done anything to prevent those two deaths, which remain under investigation.
University of New Brunswick Saint John associate professor Julia Woodhall-Melnik, who researches housing issues, said the government is heading in a dangerous direction with talk of forcing people into treatment.
"People are unhoused for multiple different reasons, and it's patronizing to say, as the government, 'we know what's best for you so just let us deal with your problems.'"
Austin had to correct some of Higgs's comments from Tuesday, when the premier suggested the legislation would apply to people on the street so that "we can help them find shelter so they will not die."
The minister said the bill will only apply in very severe cases of addiction, not to any homeless people refusing to enter shelters.
"Going to a treatment centre voluntarily is always better than involuntary," Austin said.
"But when you have people who are at the absolute bottom of their lives in addiction, incoherent most of the time, we have a responsibility as a society to help those people and try to get them into a treatment facility."
Woodhall-Melnik said people seeking voluntary addiction treatment are already encountering long waits so it's not clear whether the capacity exists to treat more people.