Ottawa Public Health looks to expand Clarence Street injection site - Action News
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Ottawa Public Health looks to expand Clarence Street injection site

An Ottawa Public Health staff report is recommending that the Clarence Street supervised injection site be made permanent and become a supervised consumption centre, where people would be able to ingest drugs in ways that aren't just intravenous.

Supervised injection site at 179 Clarence St. opened in September last year

An Ottawa Public Health staff report recommending that the Clarence Street injection site be made permanent is set to be presented to the Ottawa Board of Health on Feb. 5. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

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  • The Ottawa Board of Health passed the recommendation to keep the Clarence Street site open on Feb. 5

An Ottawa Public Health staff report is recommending that the Clarence Street supervised injection site be made permanent and turned into asupervised consumption centre,where people would be able toingest drugs in ways that aren't just intravenous.

The Lowertown site opened in September 2017 after authorization from Health Canada. Between the day it opened and Jan. 22, 2018,174 people made use of the site, with the total number of visits sitting at 2,714, according to thereport, which was tabled Monday in advance of the Ottawa Board of Health's next meeting on Monday, Feb. 5.

Eighty-five per cent of clients used services such as counselling and health education, according to the report.Medical intervention was only required in 19 cases 0.7 per cent of the total visits.

Seeking boardapproval

Feedback from clients and staff at the site has been overwhelmingly positive, saidAndrewHendriks,director of health protection atOPH.

"What we heard from clients was that the service makes a difference for them," Hendriks said. "A large number of people say they're less likely to inject in public [and]they're less likely to inject alone because of the services that we're providing."

If the site is given the green light to becomepermanent, OPH will seek approval from Health Canada to add new servicesand will work with the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care to apply for funding, Hendriks said.

Hendrikssaid it currently costs around $75,000 a month to operate the Clarence Street site.

"That's predominantly staff costs to have nurses and outreach workers and people with lived experiences in the facility," he said.

The only other legal supervised injection site currently operating in the city is at the Shepherds of Good Hope Shelter at256 King Edward Ave.

Asite at the Sandy Hill Community Health Centre was supposed to open in October, but was delayed while waiting for provincial funding.

A fourthsite at the Somerset West Community Health Centre in Chinatown has been approved, but an opening date hasn't been announced.

Overdose Prevention Ottawa ran anunsanctioned supervised consumption site at Rafael Brunet Park last fall, but they never received an exemption from Health Canada to operate and closed in November when temperatures dropped well below zero.

Expanding services

After hearing from people using the facility, OPH is now suggestingof the possibility of a wider supervised consumption site, Hendriks said.

A consumption site, as opposed to an injection site,would provide a supervised environment for people to use drugs both intravenously and in other ways, such as ingesting them nasally or orally.

Services offered would include safe drug use education, overdose prevention, counselling services, and referrals to treatment and other support services, the report said.

In order to go from an injection site to aconsumption site, the OPH report proposes making minor renovations to their current facilities.

These proposed upgrades include adding three more booths and an "after-care" area, where clients can speak to nurses and social workers about treatment and counselling, Hendriks said.

The current facility offerstwo injection booths.

City counsellor Mathieu Fleury, who represents theRideau-VanierWard,said he supports expanding the services offered at the site.

"It's an entry point into treatment and at the same time it removes the pressures from communities," he said. "We're seeing less [drug] use in our community."