ByWard Market supervised injection trailer to get permanent home - Action News
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Ottawa

ByWard Market supervised injection trailer to get permanent home

The supervised injection site housed in a former construction trailer in the parking lot of the Shepherds of Good Hope is moving to a permanent site next door.

Will be set up in Shepherds of Good Hope building; likely open in 2020

A trailer in a parking lot with wooden ramps and support around it. A sign reads
The temporary supervised injection trailer in the parking lot of the Shepherds of Good Hope on Murray Street is getting a permanent home next door. (Judy Trinh/CBC)

A permanentsupervised injection site will be built in the ByWard Market, replacing the one in a converted construction trailer in the parking lot of theShepherds of Good Hope shelteron Murray Street.

Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott was in Ottawa on Tuesday to makethe $2-million announcement,which also included $5.1 million for drug and mental health services.

"Our government is keeping our promise to make mental health and addictions a priority," Elliott said.

The Ottawa Inner City Healthtrailer began taking clients in November 2017 as a stopgap measure because of theincrease in opioid overdoses.

Demand grew for the site when the deadly drug fentanyl began surfacing in the city's illicit drug supply.By March of this year, the trailer had seennearly 50,000 visits.

'A proper facility'

Wendy Muckle, Ottawa Inner City Health's executive director, saidthenew facilitywill bein a Shepherds of Good Hope building at 256 King Edward Ave., next to the shelter,and it will be larger than the trailer adding two more injection booths from thecurrent 12.

"Obviously we are pleased," she said.

"Living out of a construction trailer was never our intention and it will be great to have a proper facility for the services we offer."

Wendy Muckle, the executive director of Ottawa Inner City Health, says the new permanent injection site will add two badly needed booths for clients, with more space to offer programs and treatment. (Michel Aspirot/CBC)

Muckle said the new site will also have a dedicated clinical room to apply dressings;it's noqdone in an open area with littleprivacy for clients.

"It will be great tohave a little more capacity which we desperately need right now," Muckle said.

The new site will have a telemedicine program thatwill matchclients with soft-tissue infectionswith infectious disease experts at the Queensway-Carleton Hospital.

Muckle said she wouldloveto be in the new building by December, but it will most likely opensometime next year.

Services 'necessary to save lives'

After winning the election last year, the Progressive Conservative government conducted a review of supervised injection sites.

Ottawa Inner City Health sentseveral injection site usersto Toronto when Elliott, one of the few ministers to stay in her role during last month's cabinet shuffle,conducted her review.

Elliott said those discussions helped solidifythe need for consumption sites and the help they provide.

"I met with peoplewith lived experience and they told me in no uncertain terms that these services were necessary to save lives," she said.

"It takes a long time to build trust and they take a negative view of conventional medicine so they need a place where they will be treated with respectand compassion and that was something of a surprise to me."

Her government also cut funding to the nearby supervised injection site on Clarence Street, which then got funding from the federal government to keep it open until the end of the year.