Community health centres apply for 2 addictions, housing hubs in Ottawa - Action News
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Community health centres apply for 2 addictions, housing hubs in Ottawa

The Pinecrest Queensway and Somerset West health centres are aiming to get a slice of $370 million of provincial funding to operate centres focused on addictions recovery and links to supportive housing.

Province announced shift away from some supervised consumption sites in summer

A women standing in a pop up medical clinic
Tamara Chipperfield, chief executive officer of the Pinecrest-Queensway Community Health Centre, says its HART Hub proposal is for walk-in services seven days a week and to support housing 64 people. (Nick Persaud/CBC)

Two of Ottawa's community health centresare part of proposalsto open Homelessness and AddictionRecovery Treatment (HART) Hubs, the province's preferred solution to tackle thedrug crisis as it shutters 10 supervised consumption sites.

Somerset West and Pinecrest-Queensway community health centres jointly announced their separateproposalson Tuesday. Both would seek millions in provincial funding and wouldwork with a long list of other partners to provide health, social serviceandaddictions supports, as well as links to supportivehousing.

Somerset West is among the centres that will be forced to close its supervised consumption site by March 31, 2025under new provincial rules that ban them from operating near schools or daycares.

The centres have not yet announced locations, saying specific sites will not be secured until they learn whether the applicationsare approved.The expected provincial contribution is up to $6.3 million per year per hub.

WATCH |Ontario bans drug consumption sites near schools, child-care centres:

Ontario has banned supervised consumption sites near schools including one in Ottawa

3 months ago
Duration 3:39
The provincial government says it will ban supervised drug consumption sites within 200 metres of schools and child-care centres. Ten facilities across the province will have to close, including one at the Somerset West Community Health Centre in Ottawa.

Suzanne Obiorah, Somerset West's executive director, said her centre's HART hub proposal would serve at least 1,200 people. It would provide community spaces, extended-hours primary care, multiple mental health and substance use treatment options, andwould also aim to connect 65 people with housing.

Obiorahsaid the centre aims to care for people "who need a high level of service."She said supporting the more than 500 people who currently rely on the centre's supervised consumption site will be a priority.

A woman with black hair, a black sweater and a floral shirt looks into the camera.
Somerset West Community Health Centre executive director Suzanne Obiorah, seen here in 2020, said its supervised consumption site is winding down. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

Tamara Chipperfield, chief executive officer ofPinecrest-Queensway,said it submitted an application last month fora standalone hub. It wouldprovide walk-in services seven days a week, offering a mix of supports including addictions counselling and withdrawal management, more commonly known as detox.

She said people would be able to access employment supports and primary care services. Pinecrest-Queensway is working on the proposalin partnership with the Ottawa West Four Rivers Ontario Health Team,

Chipperfieldsaid it's still too early to estimate how manypeople who would accessthose services, though the project also aims to house64 people through rent supplements and housing-based case managers.

"We are urging the province to approve our application so awest Ottawa HART hub can address our community's urgent needs," she said.

No consumption or needle exchange

The provincial government has committed $378 million to fund 19 HART hubs across Ontario.Health Minister Sylvia Jones announced the funding in August, in tandem with new rules that will force the closure of 10 supervised drug consumption sitesincluding Somerset West in Ottawa.

She said centres hosting those 10 sites would be prioritized for HART hub funding, should they choose to apply.

According to the Ministry of Health, the hubs are meant to provide low-barrier access to services for people experiencing homelessness, substance use issues, unemployment and mental health challenges.

They will not be allowed to provide supervised consumption services or safer drug supply, two forms of harm reduction. While HART hubs will be allowed to collect needles, they will not be able to distribute them, according to Jones.

Premier Doug Ford has castigated safer supply and supervised consumption as enabling addiction, and expressed a clear preference for recovery-based treatment.

But critics of his approach have argued that harm reduction programs save lives by preventing overdoses, keeping people alive until they're ready for treatment.

Adhering to guidelines

Both Obiorahand Chipperfieldsaid their applications will work within the scope of the province's requirements.

Obiorahnoted that Somerset West also runs a needle exchangeand is working with the province to figure out how to continue it. That could mean runningthe HART hub andneedle exchange out of separate locations.

Obiorah said HART hubs are only one strategy, andinvestment in others will be needed. Both she and Chipperfield said referrals to other organizations will be key to ensure people can still access the harm reduction services they need.

Obiorahsaid Somerset West is working on a wind-down plan for its supervised consumption site to ensure nobody falls through the cracks.

Two of the partners supporting the Pinecrest-Queensway proposal, Recovery Care and Pathways to Recovery, have been heavily involved in Ottawa's safer supply program, but Chipperfield was clear that there will be no such services at the hub.

"There will be no safe supply, no needle exchange, offered through the HART hub," she confirmed.

The CEO of the Pinecrest-Queensway Community Health Centre shares her vision of what a proposed Homelessness and Addiction Recovery Treatment (HART) Hub there could look like.