Mother fighting back against fentanyl 1 year after son's tragic overdose death - Action News
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British Columbia

Mother fighting back against fentanyl 1 year after son's tragic overdose death

On January 20, 2016, Ryan Pinneo overdosed on fentanyl in his home. CBC's Daybreak Kamloops caught up with his mother, Sandra Tully, to find out how her life has changed since his death.

Ryan Pinneo's overdose death inspired his mother to take action

Ryan Pinneo was found slumped in his computer chair in his room with headphones on, after overdosing on fentanyl on Jan. 20, 2016. (Facebook)

One year after her son's fentanyl overdose, a Kamloops mother is fighting back against the drug that took her sonlife, so other mothers don't have to suffer the way she did.

"Did I plan to go public with my son's struggle? Absolutely not," she said. "Do I want to save other people's children? Absolutely."

Tully ran a booth in the summer of 2016 at the Kamloops Farmer's Market spreading awareness about drug overdose and asking for signatures for two petitions: one asking the government to regulate and register pill presses, another to increase the number of safe consumption sites.

She also helped organize the local vigil for International Overdose Awareness Day.

"There is a lot of judgment when your child dies from a drug overdose,"Tullysaid. For that reason, she's joined several support groups inKamloopsand frequently acts as a sounding board for parents who have suffered similar losses.

"I think I've grown more compassionate to people," she added.

A day she'll never forget

Tully says 22-year-old Ryan Pinneo's death, like so many others, was an accident on a daythat started out like any other.

She was off from work and out running errands and assumed her son was sleeping, since he had been working night shifts.

"I didn't even think to check on him," she said.

Ryan Pinneo's family from left to right: Jason Pinneo, Sandra Tully, Kirk Pinneo, Ryan Pinneo. (Sandra Tully)

When no one had heard or seen Ryan, she knocked on his door. There was no answer.

She opened the door to find him slumped in his computer chair.

Pinneo had previously struggled with prescription medications, but to Tully's knowledge, he was clean.

"I thought we were in a good place. He's clean.He's talking about his future, looking for his next goal and plan and I thought we were really in a good place."

"We didn't know it was fentanyl, until we got the toxicology," she remembered.

Provincial crisis

SincePinneo'sdeath,fentanylhas become much more prevalent inKamloopsand the rest of the province. Illicit drugs claimed 914 lives in B.C. in 2016, up from 510 in 2015.

Tullybelieves the B.C. government needs to do more.

"Our provincial government shouldn't be waiting for our federal government to step in," she said.

When she writes to local politicians asking for help,Tullysaid she gets "the standard stock letter reply."

In the meantime,Tullywill forge on with her fight againstfentanyl.

Tullysays parents don't think police are doing enough to fight thefentanylcrisis.

"Whether that's true or not, we don't know, because, of course, they can't just publicly say 'we're investigating so-and-so' and I understand that,"Tullysaid.

"Just a return phone call would be great."

Vancouver firefighters Jason Lynch and Jay Jakubec work to revive an addict who has already had two doses of Narcan after overdosing on fentanyl on Vancouvers Downtown Eastside. (CBC)

While the drug has run rampant across the province, some measures have been put in place to help curb the chaos.

Naloxonewasn't readily available in January 2016, but now training and kits are accessible, not only to emergency responders, but also to the public.

"I've said right from the start that I think awareness and education is the key," saidTully.

With files from Daybreak Kamloops.


To hear the audio, click the left-hand link: One-year anniversary of Ryan Pinneo's fenantyl overdose death