Monday, May 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Timeline of B.C.'s three-year drug decriminalization pilot project

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2026 09:49 AM
  • Timeline of B.C.'s three-year drug decriminalization pilot project

British Columbia's three-year pilot project that decriminalized the possession of small amounts of illicit drugs for personal use is set to end on Jan. 31. 

Health Minister Josie Osbourne has announced B.C. will not be extending the program. Here are some of the key moments in its history.

May 31, 2022

Health Canada grants the B.C. government's request for an exemption from s. 56 of the federal Controlled Drugs and Substances Act.

Jan. 31, 2023

The three-year exemption is implemented in B.C. The change decriminalizes the personal possession of up to 2.5 grams cumulatively of opioids, crack and powdered cocaine, methamphetamine and MDMA for adults. Possession continues to be prohibited around schools, childcare facilities, airports and during the operation of motor vehicles.

Nov. 8, 2023

The Restricting Public Consumption of Illegal Substances Act receives Royal Assent in the B.C. legislature. The bill prohibits consumption of illegal substances in public spaces and authorizes police to seize them and/or direct people to stop. Three days later, the Harm Reduction Nurses Association asks B.C. Supreme Court to declare Bill 34 unconstitutional. The court later grants a temporary injunction, preventing the bill from going into effect.

Jan. 31, 2024

Mental Health and Addictions Minister Jennifer Whiteside releases a statement marking the one-year anniversary of decriminalization, saying ending the project won't save "a single life."

May 7, 2024

Health Canada grants an amendment that curtails B.C.'s exemption. Decriminalization is restricted to possession in private homes and places where homeless people are legally sheltering, as well as overdose prevention, drug checking and supervised consumption sites and health-care clinics providing outpatient addiction services.

Jan. 6, 2026

When asked about extending B.C.'s exemption that allows for decriminalization, Premier David Eby says the province is "not going back to the old policy of decriminalized public drug use in British Columbia." He says "it didn't work and we ended that."

Jan. 14, 2026

Health Minister Josie Osborne announces the province will not seek an extension of its exemption agreement with Health Canada. Osborne says the goal of the pilot project was to make it easier for people to come forward and seek help, but it "hasn't delivered the results" officials hoped for.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. plans 'substantive changes' for interprovincial trade

B.C. plans 'substantive changes' for interprovincial trade
British Columbia plans to enter a meeting with other provinces next week prepared to make "substantive changes" to its interprovincial trade barriers as the threat of hefty U.S. tariffs looms, Economic Development Minister Diana Gibson said. Gibson met virtually Friday with her provincial counterparts on the Committee on Internal Trade and said they were committed to reducing trade barriers within the country.

B.C. plans 'substantive changes' for interprovincial trade

Rain and possible snow melt set off high-water warnings for parts of B.C.

Rain and possible snow melt set off high-water warnings for parts of B.C.
A series of wet weather systems bringing rain and a warming trend has prompted high streamflow advisories for waterways on B.C.'s south coast and the lower half of Vancouver Island.  Environment Canada has issued rainfall warnings for Howe Sound and communities in north and eastern Metro Vancouver, saying as much as 100 millimetres of rain could fall by the end of the weekend. 

Rain and possible snow melt set off high-water warnings for parts of B.C.

Liberal party kicks Ruby Dhalla out of leadership race

Liberal party kicks Ruby Dhalla out of leadership race
The Liberal party has kicked Ruby Dhalla out of the leadership race just days before the contestants were to face off in two debates in Montreal. Party national director Azam Ishmael says in a statement published late Friday that the decision was made unanimously by the Liberal Leadership Vote Committee.

Liberal party kicks Ruby Dhalla out of leadership race

Earthquake shakes Vancouver and other B.C. cities

Earthquake shakes Vancouver and other B.C. cities
An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 5.1 has shaken Vancouver, Victoria and other B.C. cities. Natural Resources Canada says the quake was centred 24 kilometres north-northeast of Sechelt on the Sunshine Coast.

Earthquake shakes Vancouver and other B.C. cities

Heiltsuk Nation written constitution passes with 67 per cent of votes

Heiltsuk Nation written constitution passes with 67 per cent of votes
The Heiltsuk Nation has approved the adoption of a written constitution for the First Nation on British Columbia's central coast. The nation says 67 per cent of the 725 people who voted on the referendum were in favour of the constitution.

Heiltsuk Nation written constitution passes with 67 per cent of votes

Poilievre's proposed incentives for First Nations water, resource projects draw fire

Poilievre's proposed incentives for First Nations water, resource projects draw fire
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says he would incentivize First Nations to support natural-resource projects through industry taxes and revisiting how much sway Indigenous Peoples and environmental considerations have over approving projects.  The proposals drew swift criticism from some experts and researchers.

Poilievre's proposed incentives for First Nations water, resource projects draw fire