Advocates are calling on the federal government and the City of Vancouver to halt the march toward possible drug decriminalization in the city, saying the process excludes users and demands a do-over.
In a letter to federal Health Minister Patty Hajdu and the Vancouver and British Columbia working groups on decriminalization, a coalition of 15 organizations said the current proposal must be scrapped immediately or risks reproducing the harms of prohibition.
“We cannot abide by the phony ‘Vancouver Model’ of decriminalization and refuse to be tokenized in petty political bids,” reads the letter from groups representing users.
“We want decriminalization – but on our terms, not the terms of the police and politicians.”
The group says police have an oversized role in developing the so-called Vancouver model and that the thresholds that define simple possession are too low in the latest submission to Ottawa.
The letter comes after the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users’ (VANDU) board of directors resigned from the city’s decriminalization working group Monday. A morning meeting between the working group and Health Canada officials confirmed that the board’s input “is not being taken seriously,” VANDU said in a statement.
The open letter also comes ahead of a planned submission on decriminalization to the federal Health Department this Friday.
Health Canada is currently working with Vancouver on the city’s request for exemption from criminal provisions on simple possession of small amounts of drugs.
Vancouver has been the epicentre of an opioid crisis that saw British Columbia record 1,176 illicit drug overdose deaths in 2020 – the highest ever in a single year – and more than 7,000 deaths since a public-health emergency was declared in April 2016.
The city, province, Health Canada and Vancouver police did not respond immediately to requests for comment on the coalition’s letter.
The group is demanding the Vancouver Police Department take a backseat in discussions and asking the city to raise the proposed drug thresholds from a supposed three-day supply.
“The police and city officials and health officials go off into a room and prepare something and then they show it to us as they’re about to send it to Health Canada and make it so,” said VANDU representative Garth Mullins in a news conference Tuesday.
“That is a focus group,” he said. “That is not co-design …That is a decriminalization regime designed by and for police, and it is a Trojan horse to recriminalize us on the other side of its implementation.”
Caitlin Shane, a lawyer at the Vancouver-based Pivot Legal Society, worries that an inadequate decriminalization model could set a harmful precedent for jurisdictions across the country.
Lower thresholds on what constitutes simple possession – as opposed to possession for the purpose of trafficking – mean users can’t buy multiple days’ supply in one purchase without violating the Criminal Code.
It could also necessitate more frequent interaction with dealers, along with the attendant danger, Shane said.
“These thresholds mean that we are actually incentivizing people to engage with that criminal system more frequently because they are unable to purchase in larger amounts.”
Drug users also face greater dangers as the third wave of COVID-19 forces harm reduction sites and outreach programs to curtail their services, leaving at-risk communities out in the cold.
In B.C., deaths linked to the synthetic opioid fentanyl had been on the decline for more than a year until April 2020, when monthly numbers routinely began to double those of 2019.
Opioid-related deaths countrywide could climb as high as 2,000 per quarter in the first half of 2021, far surpassing the peak of nearly 1,200 in the last three months of 2018, according to modelling from the Public Health Agency of Canada.
Canada’s ongoing border restrictions have disrupted the flow of illicit drugs, and dealers looking to stretch their limited supplies are more apt to add potentially toxic adulterants.
Benzodiazepines have been detected in drugs circulating in parts of several provinces. Users can be difficult to rouse and slow to respond to naloxone – the drug that reverses opioid overdoses – and more likely to overdose when fentanyl or other opioids are also in the mix.
The B.C. government has made several commitments to helping drug users, with some supervised consumption sites in the province, as well as overdose prevention sites in many cities.