Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Councillors In Kamloops, B.C., Unanimously Support Safe Injection Clinics

The Canadian Press, 14 Sep, 2016 10:44 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — City councillors in Kamloops, B.C., have voted unanimously in favour of considering a supervised drug injection site similar to the groundbreaking Insite facility in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.   
     
    The vote followed a presentation from Interior Health medical health officer Dr. Silvina Mema, who says the health authority is mulling up to two sites in the city.
     
    But an immediate launch of the pilot project is unlikely because Mema says clinic locations haven't been found, community and government consultations are still required and Health Canada approval is needed.
     
    Kamloops Mayor Peter Milobar says he doesn't believe a safe injection site will be what he calls "a magical solution to everything," but he hopes the facility will reduce overdoses in the community.
     
    Interior Health wants to link the clinics to an already existing harm-reduction service for drug users but officials with at least one Kamloops social service agency say they don't have the resources to provide required detox, treatment or housing.
     
     
    Mema agrees one or two clinics will not be a complete answer to the overdose epidemic, but believes the health authority must act.
     
    "This is one more piece of work we are doing to address people who are actively injecting drugs and don't have a place to inject, and don't have someone to look after them," she says.
     
    B.C. has declared a public health emergency due to more than 400 overdose deaths this year alone deaths from powerful opioids such as fentanyl.
     
    Interior Health predicts fatal overdoses in Kamloops in 2016 could be six times higher than last year. (CFJC)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Justice Minister Hires Academic Who Thinks Supreme Court Erred On Assisted Dying

    Justice Minister Hires Academic Who Thinks Supreme Court Erred On Assisted Dying
    OTTAWA — Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould has hired a new legal affairs adviser who once argued that the Supreme Court over-stepped its bounds when it struck down the ban on medically assisted dying.

    Justice Minister Hires Academic Who Thinks Supreme Court Erred On Assisted Dying

    Energy East pipeline is safe, good for country, TransCanada tells NEB hearings

    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — TransCanada Corp. stressed its commitment to the safety of oil shipments as three days of hearings into the proposed $15.7 billion Energy East pipeline project opened in New Brunswick on Monday.

    Energy East pipeline is safe, good for country, TransCanada tells NEB hearings

    Trans-Canada Treks Struggle To Be Noticed In The Post-Terry Fox Era

    Canadians are running, biking and even pushing shopping carts across the country for various compelling causes this summer, but it's often a struggle to be noticed in the post-Terry Fox era.

    Trans-Canada Treks Struggle To Be Noticed In The Post-Terry Fox Era

    Remote Explosive System Will Keep Stretch Of Highway 1 Safer From Avalanches

    Remote Explosive System Will Keep Stretch Of Highway 1 Safer From Avalanches
    Transportation Minister Todd Stone says a new avalanche mitigation system will be operating this winter in Three Valley Gap, near Revelstoke.

    Remote Explosive System Will Keep Stretch Of Highway 1 Safer From Avalanches

    Abbotsford Police Locate Missing Indo-Canadian Woman And Two-Year-Old Son

    Abbotsford Police Locate Missing Indo-Canadian Woman And Two-Year-Old Son
    The missing mother and child were located at the residence of a relative. Both were fine. 

    Abbotsford Police Locate Missing Indo-Canadian Woman And Two-Year-Old Son

    KPU launches post-secondary bhangra course

    KPU launches post-secondary bhangra course
    Bhangra, anyone?

    KPU launches post-secondary bhangra course