Thursday, January 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

Health Minister Meets With Vancouver Firefighters Responding To Overdose Crisis

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2016 01:23 PM
    VANCOUVER — Emergency calls at Vancouver's Fire Hall No. 2 in the Downtown Eastside have nearly doubled since the introduction of the deadly opioid fentanyl.
     
    Vancouver Fire Chief John McKearney says the fire hall has been making about 1,000 runs per month this year, compared with an average of 600 calls every month in past years as overdose reports pour in from the neighbourhood.
     
    Federal Health Minister Jane Philpott met with municipal and provincial officials today at the fire hall to hear about the challenges that first responders are experiencing as they try to cope with the overdose crisis.
     
    Philpott told reporters before the meeting that she is advocating to make safe consumption sites like Vancouver's Insite possible for more communities that want them, but that's only one part of a larger solution to combating the overdose crisis.
     
    The B.C. government declared a public health emergency in April because of the dramatic increase in overdose deaths in the province, much of them caused by fentanyl.
     
    McKearney says while the Downtown Eastside hall remains ready to respond to fires, crews have shifted their focus to medical calls and have had to reduce the area they cover in an effort to be able to respond to medical emergencies.
     
    The chief says local firefighters were trained in February to use the opioid antidote naloxone and now save lives on a daily basis in a routine that could set an example for other jurisdictions in Canada to follow.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Critics Call For More Social Housing As Vancouver Set To Dismantle Homeless Camp

    Critics Call For More Social Housing As Vancouver Set To Dismantle Homeless Camp
    VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver says outreach workers are helping about two dozen people move into a shelter after the homeless camp they were staying at was deemed unsafe.

    Critics Call For More Social Housing As Vancouver Set To Dismantle Homeless Camp

    SPCA Investigates Following Death Of Controversial Sturgeon At Tsawwassen Mills Mall

    SPCA Investigates Following Death Of Controversial Sturgeon At Tsawwassen Mills Mall
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. SPCA says it has launched an investigation into the death of a sturgeon that was controversially being kept at a new mega mall in Tsawwassen, B.C.

    SPCA Investigates Following Death Of Controversial Sturgeon At Tsawwassen Mills Mall

    Black Bear With A Taste For Tuna Damages SUV In Southeastern B.C.

      RCMP say the victim left his sandwich in his SUV in the southeastern B.C., community.

    Black Bear With A Taste For Tuna Damages SUV In Southeastern B.C.

    CMHC Raises Its Overall Risk Rating For National Housing Market To Strong

    CMHC Raises Its Overall Risk Rating For National Housing Market To Strong
    Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. increased its risk rating for the national housing market on Wednesday to strong, from a moderate rating that it gave in July.

    CMHC Raises Its Overall Risk Rating For National Housing Market To Strong

    CN Rail Working To Reopen Tracks Near Yale, B.C., After Derailment

    CN Rail Working To Reopen Tracks Near Yale, B.C., After Derailment
    YALE, B.C. — Crews with CN Rail have made good progress repairing tracks following a derailment in British Columbia's Fraser Canyon.

    CN Rail Working To Reopen Tracks Near Yale, B.C., After Derailment

    Squirrel Squatter Trashes Victoria-Area Home While Couple On Vacation

     A bowl of nuts helped officers in Oak Bay, B.C., tail a suspected burglar.

    Squirrel Squatter Trashes Victoria-Area Home While Couple On Vacation