‘B.C. Government Encouraging Addiction’

The British Columbia government is actively supporting the increase in the numbers of B.C. hard drug addicts, to the point of suppressing those who are fighting against addiction:

Portugal has 64 therapeutic communities and zero consumption sites. British Columbia has zero therapeutic communities and 40-something consumption sites.

“One of Canada’s leading experts on drug addiction says British Columbia’s provincial government asked him to delete a crucial database in an attempt to censor criticism of the province’s homeless policies. The incident appears to fit within a larger, nationwide campaign to silence experts who believe that, when it comes to homelessness and drugs, Canadian policy-makers are on the wrong track.

“In 2004, Dr. Julian Somers established the “Inter-Ministry Evaluation Database” (IMED), which linked data about vulnerable populations across various B.C. ministries — for example: days spent in hospital, detentions and criminal convictions, medications, and income assistance. This helped create detailed pictures of people’s lives, allowing researchers to more accurately measure the impacts of government policies.

“Over the years, the database was used in over 30 provincial reports, 60 peer-reviewed publications and several graduate theses.

“Somers then used the IMED for his own $20-million research project into anti-poverty programs in Vancouver. The project randomly divided 497 participants into three groups, giving each a different support program. Using the IMED to follow their lives over five years, it concluded that B.C.’s standard approach to homelessness was ineffective.

{There’s your problem. In contemporary Canada, governments punish and suppress those experts who publicly disagree with government policies.}

“In B.C., as in much of Canada, the popular approach is to herd homeless people into housing where most, if not all, residents are fresh off the streets, creating a critical mass of trauma and addiction. These residents are then given a “safe supply” of free drugs and provided few resources for recovery and social reintegration.

“Somers’ study showed that if you house homeless people in a way that disperses them into normal society, and then prioritize rehabilitation, employment and social reintegration, you see a 70% reduction in crimes committed and a 50% reduction in medical emergencies, all without spending more money.

“The study confirmed the common-sense notion that it’s better to empower people to get back on their feet, rather than foster dependency through easy access to free drugs.

In a phone call, Somers contrasted Canada’s approach to that of Portugal. The Portuguese are legendary for effectively tackling addiction while decriminalizing drugs, but many don’t realize that their model focuses heavily on rehabilitation.

Portugal has 64 therapeutic communities and zero consumption sites. British Columbia has zero therapeutic communities and 40-something consumption sites”,

he noted.

Dr. Julian Somers (LORI CULBERT – POSTMEDIA NEWS)

“Armed with his study results, Somers worked with 14 non-profits to call for reforms to B.C.’s drug and homeless policies. In late February 2021, he presented his findings to several provincial deputy ministers.

A week later, the provincial government sent him a letter demanding that he destroy the IMED within one week. The official explanation was that the database was set to be retired at the end of the month, and that the government was creating its own inter-ministry database that would be broader (i.e. include family and income data) and be more efficient to operate.

“Somers found the explanation implausible, and still does.

“He says there was no way to reconstruct the IMED’s core data in the new government project. Many people had consented to having their data used only because they participated in projects specifically related to the IMED, such as Somer’s aforementioned homeless study. That consent was non-transferrable.

“The abrupt timing also troubled him, especially because the B.C. Ministry of Health had just renewed its commitment to the IMED for another year.

“Somers refused to comply. He alleges that the government responded by simply prohibiting him from updating or analyzing the IMED, or using it for new projects, without the province’s written permission. Dr. Somers says this effectively rendered the database worthless.

“Somers believes that in the nearly two years since, he has been “completely frozen out” by the B.C. government. He also alleges that he has been subject to an intimidation campaign by ‘safe supply’ advocates. He provided a copy of a July 2022 email from the British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, which lobbies for safe supply, showing that they lobbied for a conference to disinvite him from a speaking engagement. The BCCSU did not respond to a request for comment.

This government is actively hostile to the existence of the data, so I’ve completely given up. The work I was doing is no longer viable”,

he says.

“When emailed about Dr. Somer’s allegations, the Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General, which had requested the IMED’s deletion, replied that the deletion request “coincided with the expiration of relevant information sharing agreements between Dr. Somers and the Ministries”, and alluded to the superiority of the provincial government’s new, in-house database.

“The Ministry also said that, in January 2022, Dr. Somers was informed that he could have continued access to the IMED until March 2023, to allow “existing projects to conclude” and “select” published findings to be replicated in the new government database.

“The Ministry did not respond to my question concerning why the initial IMED deletion request was done so abruptly. The Ministry also did not respond to a direct question about Dr. Somer’s accusation of being “frozen out” of governmental communication, nor did it explain why, ten months after first ordering the deletion of all IMED data, it changed its mind and allowed Dr. Somers conditional access to the database.

Other public health and addiction experts say they are unsurprised at the suggestion that there is political pressure being placed on researchers whose findings are inconvenient for governments.

“Dr. Kelly Anthony, a lecturer at the University of Waterloo’s School of Public Health Sciences, called the B.C. government’s abrupt request to delete the IMED

concerning, considering the deeply politicized nature of Dr. Somers’ work”.

“She also said she wouldn’t be surprised if Somers was being punished for criticizing the government’s commitment to “safe supply”  {That’s where government uses taxpayer money to provide addicts with ‘free’ hard drugs} . Anthony believes ‘safe supply’ is poorly researched and “consigns the addict to be a slave forever, but says that in her experience, many academics are uncomfortable publicly criticizing it due to silencing, shunning and political pressure.

“This sentiment was echoed by Dr. Vincent Lam, the medical director of Coderix Medical Clinic, an addictions clinic in downtown Toronto. Lam is not familiar with the specifics of Somers work but he has publicly criticized safe supply as irresponsible. He told me that at least 10 of his colleagues have privately messaged him to express similar concerns about the potential harms of flooding communities with free opioids. He said they all, too, shared their discomfort with speaking up in a politicized environment where experts are punished if they ask the wrong questions.”

–‘The silencing of drug addiction experts who criticize ‘safe supply’’,

Adam Zivo, National Post, Jan. 02, 2023

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/silencing-drug-addiction-experts-who-question-safe-supply

Photo GLENN BAGLO – PNG files

B.C. Government News Release, May 31, 2022:

“British Columbia is taking a critical step toward reducing the shame and fear associated with substance use as the federal Minister of Mental Health and Addictions and Associate Minister of Health announced the granting of a three-year exemption under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) to remove criminal penalties for people who possess a small amount of certain illicit substances for personal use…”

https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/health-concerns/controlled-substances-precursor-chemicals/policy-regulations/policy-documents/exemption-personal-possession-small-amounts-certain-illegal-drugs-british-columbia.html

{Note how they dishonestly leave out the names of these “illicit substances” while encouraging the use of the ‘substances’ by “reducing the shame and fear associated with substance use” – the very thing that keeps many from becoming addicts…}

–‘B.C. receives exemption to decriminalize possession of some illegal drugs for personal use’,

https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2022MMHA0029-000850

“The illegal drugs covered by the exemption are:

–Opioids (such as heroin, morphine, and fentanyl)

Crack and powder cocaine

Methamphetamine (Meth)

MDMA (Ecstasy) …”

–‘Decriminalizing people who use drugs in B.C.’,

https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/overdose/decriminalization

Vancouver is now Drug Central (Photo-Vancouver Is Awesome)

Legalization having no effect so far:

“Another 198 British Columbians died from toxic drugs in July, according to data released Tuesday by the B.C. Coroners Service, bringing the death toll in the first seven months of the year to 1,455.

“The coroners service said the 1,455 deaths from January to July are the most ever reported in the first seven months of the year since a public health emergency over drug poisoning deaths in the province was declared in 2016…

It puts the province on pace to potentially exceed the 2,383 deaths recorded last year. A total of 12,739 people in the province have died from drug overdoses in those seven years…”

–‘B.C. sets new record with 1,455 drug deaths in 1st 7 months of 2023’,

Chad Pawson, CBC News, Aug. 29, 2023

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/toxic-drug-deaths-july-2023-1.6950922

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

From 2018:

“Toronto’s experience with safe-injection sites has not lived up to their billing. They were supposed to reduce the number of needles and garbage and public drug use; in Moss Park, especially, many otherwise supportive residents will tell you the opposite has occurred in spades.

“That’s not just anecdote. In June, city staff announced they would need $1 million extra a year for more needle-and-garbage removal and added security in Allan Gardens and Moss Park. Even area city councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam, darling of the Left, supports a moratorium on other facilities in the area, citing

a dramatic increase of criminal activity, assault and theft in the neighbourhood”.

–‘Study’s inconvenient evidence on safe-injection sites could be bad news for proponents’,

Chris Selley, National Post, September 7, 2018

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/chris-selley-studys-inconvenient-evidence-on-safe-injection-sites-could-be-bad-news-for-proponents

See also:

Government Aiding Hard Drug Dealers’ (Injection Sites) {May 15, 2017}:

‘Vancouver’s drug strategy has been a disaster. Be very wary of emulating it.’

https://hectorheisler.wordpress.com/2017/05/15/government-aiding-hard-drug-dealers/

The Foolishness of Injection Sites{Jan.22, 2020}:

What is compassionate or ‘progressive’ about making seniors afraid of going out in their neighbourhood in the evening, about children stumbling on syringes filled with poison in their local park?

https://hectorheisler.wordpress.com/2020/01/22/the-foolishness-of-injection-sites/

Tags: , , ,

Leave a comment