Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Funeral Chain Creates Program To Underscore The Dangers Of Fentanyl

The Canadian Press, 01 Dec, 2017 09:48 PM
    LANGLEY, B.C. — A funeral services chain in British Columbia is developing a program it hopes will cut the number of drug deaths related to fentanyl among children and young adults.
     
     
    Alternatives Funeral and Cremation Services has created a fentanyl prevention program after a funeral home in the chain reported serving four to five families every month who had lost a loved one to an overdose in Metro Vancouver.
     
     
    The owner of the chain, Tyrel Burton, says the company felt it could no longer tolerate those numbers and unlike other programs focusing on harm reduction, it decided to aim at prevention through the use of visual aids that it describes as "powerful, perhaps even controversial."
     
     
    The program includes a poster of grieving family members surrounding a coffin, under a banner reading "Will fentanyl be the reason for your next family get-together?"
     
     
    A casket and hearse are also part of the 45-minute presentation aimed at parents and their children aged 12 and up.
     
     
    The death toll has surged since the powerful opioid fentanyl arrived in the province.
     
     
    Coroner's service statistics between January and September of this year show there were 186 deaths involving victims aged 10 to 29. 
     
     
    The company’s presentation also involves personnel from local victim services, the coroner’s service and parents who have lost a child or young adult family member to addictive drugs.
     
     
     
    "We felt that we had to do something to reach teens and young adults before they become addicted," Burton said in a news release. "This program is our response to what we see as a critical need."
     
     
    Funeral director John Romeyn in nearby Abbotsford said he backs the program after hearing a comment from a grieving dad.
     
     
    "I had a father say to me, 'I was supposed to (be choosing) clothes for my daughter to wear for her graduation. Now I'm picking something to wear for her casket,' " he said.
     
     
    Romeyn said all of those involved in the presentation try to impress on young people that no one is immune from the dangers of fentanyl or other opioids.
     
     
    "We've dealt with pastors' children and lawyers' kids, and everyday people who are out there … either experimenting or the casual user who isn't aware of what's out there," he added.
     
     
    The funeral home plans to visit schools, church youth groups and community centres around Metro Vancouver with presentations, which are expected to begin in early 2018. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Air Canada Seeking Bank Credit Card Partner For New Loyalty Program

    Air Canada Seeking Bank Credit Card Partner For New Loyalty Program
    MONTREAL — Air Canada says it is launching a search for a co-branded credit card partner for its new loyalty program.

    Air Canada Seeking Bank Credit Card Partner For New Loyalty Program

    Trudeau Stands By Tax Reforms As Government Says Deficit Smaller Than Expected

    OTTAWA — The Liberal government will go ahead with controversial tax reforms despite clear new evidence the economy is rebounding, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday.

    Trudeau Stands By Tax Reforms As Government Says Deficit Smaller Than Expected

    Woman Found Dead In Newfoundland Was Murdered, Spouse Died By Suicide: RCMP

    Woman Found Dead In Newfoundland Was Murdered, Spouse Died By Suicide: RCMP
    Police in eastern Newfoundland say an 18-year-old woman found dead in Marystown on the weekend was murdered, and her spouse killed himself.

    Woman Found Dead In Newfoundland Was Murdered, Spouse Died By Suicide: RCMP

    Accused In Slaying Of Montreal Store Clerk Sought Weapon Disposal Advice On Web

    MONTREAL — A man accused of killing a young store clerk in a Montreal grocery store allegedly used his smartphone to make numerous web searches in the days after the slaying that were related to the crime.

    Accused In Slaying Of Montreal Store Clerk Sought Weapon Disposal Advice On Web

    WATCH: Alberta Man Angry After Getting Ticket For Going One Kilometre Over Speed Limit

    WATCH: Alberta Man Angry After Getting Ticket For Going One Kilometre Over Speed Limit
      Mathieu Gagne, 31, said he was nabbed Friday in his Jeep for driving 101 kilometres in a 100-kilometre zone just north of Edmonton.

    WATCH: Alberta Man Angry After Getting Ticket For Going One Kilometre Over Speed Limit

    B.C. Teaching Material Linking 'Squaw' To 'Aboriginal Woman' Pulled For Review

    B.C. Teaching Material Linking 'Squaw' To 'Aboriginal Woman' Pulled For Review
    A parent took to social media over the weekend to express her shock about educational material used at Templeton Secondary School in Vancouver related to the graphic novel Susanna Moodie: Roughing it in the Bush.

    B.C. Teaching Material Linking 'Squaw' To 'Aboriginal Woman' Pulled For Review