Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

18,000 lives later, B.C. marks 10 years since declaring overdose emergency

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2026 11:55 AM
  • 18,000 lives later, B.C. marks 10 years since declaring overdose emergency

Events are planned across British Columbia today to mark 10 years since the province declared a public health emergency related to the overdose crisis that has since killed more than 18,000 people.

A "moment of silence and minute of rage" is scheduled for this afternoon at the B.C. Legislature in Victoria as part of a rally being organized by advocacy groups including Moms Stop the Harm, Doctors for Safer Drug Policy and the Nanaimo Area Network of Drug Users.

Similar memorial events are planned in Prince George, Cranbrook and Powell River along with an online webinar on Indigenous approaches to harm reduction and an art show in Victoria. 

On April 14, 2016, the emergency declaration was issued after the province had reported 474 apparent illicit drug deaths in 2015, a number that would climb to more than 2,000 deaths annually as the crisis intensified. 

The anniversary comes amid grief for the people who have died and calls for the government to do more.

An online post from the Vancouver-based Canadian Drug Policy Coalition says over the past 10 years the urgency of the declaration seems to have "ebbed away," alongside the government’s willingness to use the powers that it grants.

"It feels impossible to separate the personal from the political, the specific grief of individual losses from the collective, cumulative exhaustion of so much loss," the post says.

"This is compounded by witnessing the ongoing crush of a system that actively harms people, and the ways decisionmakers continue to prop it up."

Once seen as being on the cutting edge of drug policy, B.C. government has ended a drug decriminalization pilot program and rolled back key parts of its safer supply policy 

Premier David Eby has said decriminalization "didn't work," but Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said Monday that she "absolutely" believed "there was political pressure" to stop the three-year trial, which removed criminal penalties for those caught with small amounts of certain illicit drugs for personal use.

Health Minister Josie Osborne announced in January that B.C. would not apply for an extension to decriminalization because it had not delivered the results that government hoped for.

On Monday Osborne acknowledged the government has more to do but promised not to "take our foot off the gas" on policies including harm-reduction services, and expanding the treatment and recovery system.

The coalition, which works with more than 100 organizations across Canada, is calling on all provinces and territories to act with urgency to address the ongoing crisis.

"On this anniversary, we send our love, sorrow and rage to everyone who is mourning, who is angry, who is weary, who is trying. We remember and honour the people we have lost," the statement says.

"We acknowledge the thousands of people living with grief who continue to work toward a better future, all while some who hold power manipulate the issue for political gain, cut funding and restrict evidence-based services, and politicize and criticize life-saving work."

There were 1,833 overdose deaths in B.C. last year, 21 per cent down from 2024 — but almost four times the toll in 2014.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

Elections Canada says protocol wasn't followed in Nunavik during federal election

Elections Canada says protocol wasn't followed in Nunavik during federal election
Elections Canada says voting services in Nunavik during the spring federal election were "significantly hindered" by a lack of planning and oversight that caused some polls to close early.

Elections Canada says protocol wasn't followed in Nunavik during federal election

Carney, Smith sign pipeline deal, open door to changing B.C. tanker ban

Carney, Smith sign pipeline deal, open door to changing B.C. tanker ban
Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith have signed a memorandum of understanding that commits them to working toward building an oil pipeline to the West Coast — and opens the door to changes to the coastal tanker ban.

Carney, Smith sign pipeline deal, open door to changing B.C. tanker ban

Man dies in southern Manitoba after losing control on electric scooter, RCMP say

Man dies in southern Manitoba after losing control on electric scooter, RCMP say
Mounties say a 46-year-old man died after losing control on an electric scooter in southern Manitoba.

Man dies in southern Manitoba after losing control on electric scooter, RCMP say

Hong Kong Canadians reeling after deadly highrise inferno

Hong Kong Canadians reeling after deadly highrise inferno
Canadians with roots in Hong Kong have been watching in horror at news of the fire that tore through seven highrise towers in the Chinese special administrative region, leaving dozens dead and hundreds missing.   

Hong Kong Canadians reeling after deadly highrise inferno

What you need to know about the oil tanker ban on B.C.'s coast

What you need to know about the oil tanker ban on B.C.'s coast
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is urging Ottawa to terminate the West Coast oil tanker ban as the federal government prepares to unveil the details of a new energy pact it has been negotiating with the province.

What you need to know about the oil tanker ban on B.C.'s coast

Pipeline agreement includes new target of 75 per cent cut in methane emissions

Pipeline agreement includes new target of 75 per cent cut in methane emissions
An agreement between Ottawa and Alberta that could clear the path for a new oil pipeline to the Pacific will also require a 75 per cent cut in methane emissions over the next decade, a source tells The Canadian Press.

Pipeline agreement includes new target of 75 per cent cut in methane emissions