New home found for Halifax methadone clinic - Action News
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Nova Scotia

New home found for Halifax methadone clinic

Halifax's community-based methadone clinic has found a new home directly across the street from its current location.

Direction 180's current space was intended to treat 30 patients; today more than 440 walk through the door

Direction 180 is currently located at 2158 Gottingen Street in Halifax's north end, but has long outgrown the space. (CBC)

Halifax's community-based methadone clinichas found a new home directly across the street from its current location.

For the past 17 years, Direction 180 has dispensed methadone to a growing number of people at its modest location beside the Mi'kmawNative Friendship Centre on Gottingen Street.

The space was originally intended to treat 30 patients,buttodaymore than 440 clients walk throughthe door. At its peak, Direction 180 regularly administered methadoneto 530 clients.

Executive director Cindy MacIsaac saidthe building is long past its due date.

"We have some structural concerns about the building so I think this is a good time to make a fresh break," she said.

When the provincial government announced last fall it wasinvesting $800,000 to battle the growing wait-list for opioid-addiction treatment in Nova Scotia,Direction 180 started looking for a new home.

It scouted threesites in the north end of the Halifax peninsula, but had no luck.

Direction 180 executive director Cindy MacIsaac says she has some 'structural concern's about the centre's current space. She's looking forward to moving into the Guardian Pharmacy location across the street. (CBC)

According to MacIsaac, when you operate a methadone clinic, finding a new space isn't always easy.

"We had looked around the peninsula, mostly around this area and we had no success," she said."When people learn who we are, they generally don't want to rent to us."

Then a neighbour stepped up.

Peter Jorna, who owns Scotia Pharmacyon Gottingen Street, said he had been following CBC Newscoverage of the difficulty Direction 180 was having as it scouted a new home.

Jorna, whois planningto move his pharmacy into the nearby MacDonald Building,also on Gottingen Street,has offered to rent his space to Direction 180.

New space is accessible

MacIsaac saidshe and her staff are eager to move.

"We'll be moving into a facility that is wheelchair accessible, new, clean and bright, and will provide us with a more efficient space to provide our services. So we're excited to move."

A larger, more modern space will be a "vast improvement," she said.

Direction 180 started looking for a new space last fall, when the province announced funding to reduce the wait-list for those seeking opioid-addiction treatment. (CBC)

And Jorna said he doesn't expect much trouble from the neighbours.

"The ironic part about that is that anybody who lives beside a pharmacy is really, technically, beside a methadone clinic because most pharmacies dispense methadone there."

It'll be up to Direction 180 to undertake whatever renovations areneeded to the former pharmacy, Jorna said.

He'll be moving his pharmacy out by mid-March, and Direction 180plans to move into the vacant space by early summer.

Despite the new digs, MacIsaac saidthe organization is already eyeing its next move:Eventually, she said, Direction 180 will move in with the Mi'kmawNative FriendshipCentre when its new location is built at the site of the former Red Cross on Gottingen Street.