Remembering friends and family lost on Overdose Awareness Day - Action News
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Remembering friends and family lost on Overdose Awareness Day

Today marks International Overdose Awareness Day and many in the community will be gathering to remember friends and family who have died from an overdose.

'We really need to move past the judgment and stigma,' says Simone Morrison

A young woman walks by purple wooden markers in a field.
Organizers of an Overdose Awareness Day event in Cambridge say the day is a time to bring awareness to the issue of drug poisoning and the opioid crisis. (Carmen Groleau/CBC)

For many gathered at Dickson Park in Cambridge, Ont., International Overdose Awareness Day is a painful, but necessary, day to bring awareness around the ongoing drug-poisoning crisis that is gripping communities across the country.

"As a community, we have the responsibility to gather and rally together. We're in a crisis and we need to educate, to learn and make the changes," MelinaPearson, co-chair of theRegion of Waterloo's Harm Reduction Working Group, told CBC News.

According to data from the Waterloo Region Integrated Drug Strategy, so far this yearthere have been 43suspected overdose deaths and 860 overdose-related calls.

The City of Cambridge held anInternational Overdose Awareness Day on Aug. 24, a week ahead ofbefore the official day, which is Wednesday.

Hundreds of purple makers were placed acrossDickson Park, each representing someone who has died from an overdose in the region in the last five years. Some were plain purple, otherswere decorated with a person's name or their photo.

A wooden, purple marker reads: Jesse James Madole 16 years young.
Rows of purple markers were placed at Dickson Park in Cambridge, many decorated with a person's name. Each represents a person who has died from an overdose in Waterloo region in the last five years. (Carmen Groleau/CBC)

International Overdose Awareness Day is also a day for people to gather, remember and mournfriends and family who have died from an overdose.

"I'm overwhelmed right now with thinking about the old memories I had with them and it seems like it was just yesterday," said Kitty, from Cambridge, as shestood in the middle of dozens of purple markers pointingto the peopleshe once knew.

"Like Jackson over there. I saw him the day before he died."

She said she's in the process of making a marker for her boyfriend, who died five years ago from an overdose. She said she also triesto do her part to help others.

"I'll go out to work alongACCKWAto give out Narcan kits and clean supplies. I'll go and distribute them to camps that can't make it soeasily into town," she said.

"Overdose is an epidemic. It's a serious matter that has to be addressed."

A woman sits in a grassy field with her white dog at her side.
Kitty sits with her dog C.J. at Dickson Park in Cambridge, where an International Overdose Awareness Day event was held on Aug. 24. (Carmen Groleau/CBC)

'The folks we serve have worth and value'

Educating the publicandreducingthe stigma facing people who use drugs is one of the hardest parts of the job forSimone Morrison,manager of outreach, education and prevention with SanguenHealth Centre.

"The hardest part for me is having to explain to people that the folks we serve have worth and value. The exhausting part is having to repeat that constantly and having to fight for that," Morrison told CBC.

"We really need to move past the judgment and stigma we have toward people who use substances."

The City of Cambridge isnowin the process of applying for a Consumption and Treatment Services(CTS) site, which Morrison and Sade Bezjak sayis a step in the right direction.

Bezjak, who is a harm reduction worker with Sanguenand works at Kitchener's CTSsite, has seen first hand the positive impactthe sitehas had on thepeople who use it in that city.

"We've heard horrible things, like we're enablingto outlandish things like we're providing drugs, but none of that is true," she said.

"What we're providing is support, a space for people to come to test their drugs, to use with out judgment and that's so important. If we can see that in Cambridge then I think we'll see a massive shift in the mentality of things that are going on here."

The City of Kitchener will host an Overdose Awareness Day eventfrom 6 p.m.to 8 p.m. at Victoria Park, as will the City of Guelph atthe Royal Bank Plaza from 11:45 a.m.to 2 p.m.

Two women stand in front of a health van in Cambridge, Ont.
Simone Morrison and Sade Bezjak work with Sanguen Health Centre. (Carmen Groleau/CBC)