Addictions doctor to purchase Clinic 554 for use as apartments for those in recovery - Action News
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New Brunswick

Addictions doctor to purchase Clinic 554 for use as apartments for those in recovery

Dr. Sara Davidson, director of River Stone Recovery Centre in Fredericton, says she's going through the process of purchasing Clinic 554 in order to transform it into an apartment building with 16 to 24 units.

Plan is to turn downtown Fredericton clinic into 4-storey apartment building

A one-storey building on a street corner with a sidewall painted in rainbow colours. A sign says Clinic 554.
Dr. Sara Davidson is working on a deal to purchase Clinic 554 in Fredericton, with plans to turn the downtown building into subsidized apartment units for people recovering from drug addiction. (Jon Collicott/CBC)

A deal is in the works for Clinic 554 to be purchased and turned into an apartment building for people recovering from drug addiction.

Dr. Sara Davidson, the director of River Stone Recover Centre in Fredericton, said the transaction is still in progress, but her plan is to purchase the building at 554 Brunswick St. and renovate it into a four-storey apartment building containing 16 to 24 units.

Davidson opened River Stone Recovery Centre in 2020, to offer treatment for peoplesufferingfrom addiction to stimulants and opiates. It was one of five centres across Canada to receiveHealth Canada funding to pilot a treatment method thatinvolves prescribing injectedmedical-grade opiates for those who don't respond to oral treatment.

She said the centre has seen success so far, with patients responding well to treatment.

However, housing remains a barrier to some successfully following through with treatment, Davidson said, andthe hope is the apartments will offer a safe and secure environment to help those in recovery.

"I think anybody will be able to set their life goals and meet them once they have somewhere they can live," she said.

"It'simpossible to imagine anything really changing or not getting worse if people aren't housed.

"Housing aloneis a medicine and then it helps provide that stability."

Woman with long salt-and-pepper hair
Davidson, the medical director of River Stone Recovery Centre, said secure and stable housing will give recovering drug addicts a better chance of beating addiction. (Gary Moore/CBC)

Aside from apartment units, she said the plan also involves creating a training and entrepreneurship hub on the ground floor to give residents and others in the community the help to re-engage with society.

Davidson said it's difficult to say when the deal willbe finalized, but said the hope is to have it done and construction commencing by next spring.

She said she's hoping to tap funding from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, and to have the apartments subsidized through the Department of Social Development.

She said wanted to share information about the plan publicly sooner than laterto clear up rumours in the community that the intention was to open a safe injection site.

Those rumours have been coupled with concerns from residents about the site's proximity to George Street Middle School, she said.

"I recognize that people get frightened when theythink of other people thathave substance use disorders buta lot of that is based on just,unfortunately, on, on fear rather than necessarily on who the actual individual people are," she said.

A history as medical services clinic

For decades, the Brunswick Street building has been used for medical services, including abortions, which were provided there for a while bytheDr. Henry Morgentalerclinic.

The clinic was forced to close in 2014 because the province wouldn't fund the procedures.

Dr. Adrian Edgar took overin 2015 and rebranded it Clinic 554, with a focus on abortions and transgender health care. In2019, he announced he'd put the clinic up for sale for the same reason, a lack of funding from the province.

CBC News asked Edgar for an interview about what the pending sale of Clinic 554 meansfor the clinic and the services it offers.

Man with brown hair and moustache wearing glasses and a grey tweed jacket and grey woolen vest looks directly into camera.
Dr. Adrian Edgar, medical director of Clinic 554, said he'd be glad if the space continued to be used to serve vulnerable people. (Hadeel Ibrahim/CBC)

Edgar replied in an email that it would be "premature" for him to predict how it will impact abortion and sexual health-care access at this point.

"If the sale goes through, I'll be thrilled to know another family physician has taken up the torch and will continue to use the space to take care of vulnerable [New Brunswickers]," he said.

"There's a tremendous health impact when a person is stigmatized for their most difficult circumstances, and it is a core tenet of family practice to treat everyone with compassion by meeting them where they're at.

"I've tried to do that every day, and I know Dr. Davidson will, too."