as jones was making the announcement inside ottawa’s shaw centre, protestors outside were claiming the ford government was killing people. after her speech, a reporter even asked how many people will die as a result of these safe injection sites being closed.
let’s be clear, people are dying now and as the province has expanded such locations, the deaths have gone up, not down. health canada approved the first safe injection sites in the province in 2017 with three in toronto while sites in ottawa, hamilton and elsewhere followed.
in 2017,
ontario had 1,270 opioid overdose deaths
, a number that rose to 2,858 in 2021 before dropping to 2,531 in 2022. the final numbers for 2023 were not available but the quarterly numbers did show overdose deaths were rising last year.
“we have a system that has not worked,” jones said.
that’s an understatement.
while the ford government has announced they are moving in the direction of hub models for treatment, many of the so-called experts in this field have been pushing for a different direction. dr. kieran moore, the province’s chief medical officer, has called for a total decriminalization of drugs, a position the city of toronto adopted when it asked the trudeau government in ottawa to approve a request for decriminalization.