Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Overdose Prevention Opens Where Crisis Grows In Powell River, B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jul, 2019 10:05 PM

    POWELL RIVER, B.C. - The small city of Powell River has been one of the hardest hit by British Columbia's overdose crisis, prompting Vancouver Coastal Health to open its first overdose prevention site outside of Vancouver on Thursday.

     

    Authority medical health officer Dr. Geoff McKee says the contaminated drug supply has been devastating for Powell River and they've found many who die of overdoses in B.C. have hidden their drug use, only to die alone.

     

    The new pilot site was supposed to open last month, but an authority spokeswoman says a break-in at the site delayed the launch while they installed fortified locks and a security system.

     

    The authority says there were 39 overdose deaths last year for the North Shore-Coast Garibaldi area that includes Powell River and there were 76 emergency calls for overdoses during the same period in the city.

     

    Shannon Ollson, with the Powell River Community Action Team, says the site is badly needed because there are overdoses in the laundromat, at the park and in the washrooms of convenience stores.

     

    Vancouver Coastal is providing clinical support and supplies, while the Powell River Community Action Team will manage the site and the City of Powell River is leasing the property for free for one year.

     

    Kathryn Colby, the co-ordinator for the action team, says stigma and shame cause people to use alone, putting them at extreme risk of fentanyl poisoning and overdose.

     

    "Middle-aged men, many with young families, are incredibly vulnerable to accidental overdose death, leaving a social toll on the community which we have yet to fully realize. This overdose prevention site pilot is a community-created project, designed to address these preventable tragedies."

     

    More than 1,500 people died from an illicit drug overdose last year in B.C. and 1,208 of them were male.

     

    Vancouver has six overdose prevention sites.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Singer Jeremy Gabriel Who Won Rights Case Against Comedian Exits Social Media Following Threats

    Jeremy Gabriel won a human rights case against comedian Mike Ward in 2016, arguing that a joke mocking his disability had amounted to discrimination.

    Singer Jeremy Gabriel Who Won Rights Case Against Comedian Exits Social Media Following Threats

    Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System

    Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System
    The border agency received approximately $40 million over five years to help enforce the new cannabis law.

    Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System

    Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School

    Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School
    The 11-year-old, identified only as AB, testified Tuesday before Ontario's human rights tribunal in a case focusing on how rolling back the curriculum impacts LGBTQ students.

    Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School

    Netflix Apologizes To Lac-Megantic For Using Rail Disaster Footage In 'Bird Box'

    MONTREAL — Netflix is apologizing to the people of Lac-Megantic after actual footage of the 2013 rail disaster that devastated the town was used in dramas on the streaming service.

    Netflix Apologizes To Lac-Megantic For Using Rail Disaster Footage In 'Bird Box'

    Jason Kenney Accuser Declines To Specify Which Housing Rules He Says Kenney Broke

    A lawyer accusing Alberta United Conservative Leader Jason Kenney of breaking parliamentary residency rules while serving as an MP is declining to explain which regulation he believes Kenney broke or how he broke it.

    Jason Kenney Accuser Declines To Specify Which Housing Rules He Says Kenney Broke

    AG Hopes Federal Election Won't Get In Way Of Ottawa Co-Operating With B.C.

    AG Hopes Federal Election Won't Get In Way Of Ottawa Co-Operating With B.C.
    British Columbia's attorney general says he's hoping a federal election campaign won't get in the way of Ottawa fully co-operating with the province to deal with serious money-laundering issues.

    AG Hopes Federal Election Won't Get In Way Of Ottawa Co-Operating With B.C.