Sudbury health officials ask city council to help find location for supervised consumption site - Action News
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Sudbury

Sudbury health officials ask city council to help find location for supervised consumption site

The search for a location for a supervised consumption site in Sudbury is at a standstill, but those involved with the effort hope councillors and city staff will find a suitable solution.

Progress on establishing a supervised drug use site in northern Ontario city is stalled

Sudbury's Community Drug Strategy is working toward setting up a supervised consumption site in the northern Ontario city, but progress has been stalled. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

The search for a location for a supervised consumption site in Sudbury is at a standstill, but those involved with the effort hope councillors and city staff will find a suitable solution.

Last fall, Sudbury's community drug strategy received several community applications for site locations, but they were all rejectedbecause they did not meet the criteria.A site needs to be secured before proceeding with next steps, and applying for federal and provincial approval.

At a city council meeting Tuesday night, members of the community drug strategy, which is spearheaded by Public Health Sudbury and Districts and the Greater Sudbury Police Services along with other community partners in the northern Ontario city, appealed to councillors for help.

"We are here sounding an alarm," said Sudbury police Chief Paul Pedersen, adding the team has "hit a brick wall" with its search.

"We're asking for your support, which we know we have. but we're also asking that that support turns to direction, that commits to looking for what we don't know might exist," said Pederen. "We don't know about city facilities locations, moving of services. We don't know about rezoning that may be possible. We really don't know about future plans."

A growing crisis

Opioid-related deaths rose throughout Ontario last year, but the northeast was disproportionately impacted.

In 2020, Sudbury had the highest per capita opioid overdose death ratein the province, with 105 deaths in total reported in Sudbury and districts, up from 56 in 2019. In 2020, all five of the health units with the highest per capita death rates were in northern Ontario four of themin the northeast.

"Sounding the alarm I think is putting it mildly," said Coun. RenLapierre, who spoke passionately about the need to address the opioid crisis.

"I think we need every fog horn out there, we need every bell, everything ringing, and loudly. Not just once but non stop until we figure out how to slow down this concern."

Picture of Rene.
'We need every fog horn out there, we need every bell, everything ringing, and loudly, not just once but non-stop until we figure out how to slow down this concern,' Ren Lapierre, councillor for Ward 6 in Greater Sudbury, told a council meeting Tuesday. (Submitted by The City of Greater Sudbury)

Lapierre put forward a motion directing staff towork with the community drug strategy to assess possible properties where a supervised consumption site could be located, including private or municipally owned lands.

Lapierre'smotion passed unanimously. It also asks staff to provide an update to council at its June 15 meeting.

Unsanctioned site 'saving lives'

The presentation to councilcamejust days after city bylaw officersissued a trespassing order against volunteers with an unsanctioned, temporary supervised consumption site that has been operating in the city.

The volunteer-run Sudbury Temporary Overdose Prevention Society (STOPS) had been operating in the parking lot of the YMCA downtown.

The Sudbury Temporary Overdose Prevention Society began operating an unsanctioned supervised consumption site in 2019. The volunteer run group has been running on and off since then, in several locations. (Kate Rutherford/CBC)

During Tuesday's council meeting, Coun. Robert Kirwan asked if the city could"turn a blind eye" to unsupervised sitesand allow them to continue to operate until a permanent site has been secured and set up.

Medical officer of health Dr. Penny Sutcliffe said it is possible to apply to the federal government for an exemption "based on an urgent public health need." While it would not provide funding, it would allow such a site to operate.

Kirwansaid it would make sense to pursue that option, to allow a group like STOPS to continue to operate while the city searches for a permanent site that fits all of the criteria.

'I don't think there's any other public health unit that could declare more of than emergency than Sudbury,' says Robert Kirwan, councillor for Ward 5. (Submitted by The City of Greater Sudbury)

"I don't think there's any other public health unit that could declare more of than emergency than Sudbury," said Kirwan.

Richard Rainville, executive director of Rseau Access Network and a member of the Community Drug Strategy, agreed the work of STOPS volunteers continues to be essential.

"The temporary pop-up sites that are occurring are saving lives."