Sask. government not considering decriminalization of small amounts of illicit drugs - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Sask. government not considering decriminalization of small amounts of illicit drugs

The Saskatchewan government will not be following their B.C. counterparts in decriminalizing small amounts of illicit drugs.

Saskatoon, Regina police boards studying decriminalization

Saskatchewan will not be pursuing an agreement with the federal government to decriminalize small amounts of illicit drugs. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

The Saskatchewan government will not be following their B.C. counterparts in decriminalizing small amounts of illicitdrugs.

On Tuesday, the federal government and B.C. governmentmade a joint announcement the first of its kind in Canada.

Canadians 18and older will be able to possess up to a cumulative 2.5 grams of opioids, cocaine, methamphetamine, and MDMA within British Columbia.

The exemption will operate as a three-year pilot project andmeans there will be no arrests, charges, or seizures for personal possession at or below the 2.5-gram threshold.

The Saskatchewan government will not be the next province in line to pursue the policy.

"The government of Saskatchewan is not considering any decision to criminally exempt substances like methamphetamine and cocaine," a government spokesperson said in a statement.

"It is unknown what potential long-term effects that decriminalizing illicit drugs will have with regards to public safety."

Thegovernment said it is focused ontreatment and recovery of people with substance issues.

It said 150 addictions treatment spaces are being added across the province in the next three years.

The governments of Alberta, Manitoba, and Quebec said this week they will not bepursuing small-scale decriminalization.

Toxic drugs killed 464 people last year

Opposition justice critic Nicole Sarauer said the "addictions crisis should be treated as a health issue, less of a criminal issue."

"It's not actually a huge change from how simple possession charges are being addressed, especially in our major centres in Regina and Saskatoon in particular, where a bit of a discretionary approach is taken."

Crosses were planted in front of the Saskatchewan legislature building in 2021 to draw attention to overdose deaths in the province. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

Sarauer said she would like to see safe consumption sites funded before decriminalization is implemented.

In Saskatchewan in 2021, 464 people were confirmed or suspected to have died due to drug toxicity,according to theSaskatchewan Coroners Service. In 2019, there were 179 such deaths.

Safe consumption sites

Saskatoon's Prairie Harm Reduction is the only organization in Saskatchewan witha federal exemption to operate a safe consumption site.

In 2021, the organization saw 577 people access its site. They treated seven overdoses and did not have a fatality on site.

The provincial government provides funding to Prairie Harm Reduction but not the $1 million the organization has requested to operate its safe consumption operation.

"The safe consumption site is a tool for engagement. It's a tool for education. This idea of bringing people in rather than pushing them out allows us to bring people into services and engage them in conversations and education about their drug use," saidKayla DeMong, executive director of Prairie Harm Reduction.

Prairie Harm Reduction operates Saskatchewan's only safe consumption site that has a federal exemption. (Kendall Latimer/CBC)

DeMong said PHR's services are aiming to also combat the rise in HIV infections through injection drug use.

Saskatchewan's rate of HIV infections is double the national average.

When it comes to the issue of decriminalization, DeMong said the 2.5-gram threshold established in the B.C. pilot is perhaps too low.

DeMong said she recently spoke to Vancouver IslandNDP MP Gord Johns who introducedprivate member'sbill C-216, which would decriminalize possession of small amounts of drugs across Canada and expunge certain drug-related convictions. It was voted down by MPs onThursday.

DeMong said if the federal government eventually moves to decriminalize across Canada it needs to be mandatory.

"If it's an opt-out, opt-in opportunity for different provinces, what we will see in Saskatchewan is that they will opt out," she said.

Saskatoon and Regina police boards discussdecriminalization

Last August, Saskatoon'sboard of police commissionersasked for a report looking into expanding harm reduction programs in the city, including decriminalizing simple possession.

After a meeting in April, the board decided the issue required further study.

DeMong said Saskatoon Police Chief Troy Cooper has been open about the issue of how police deal with drug possession.

"It's a case by case situation where they're using their skills to assess whether or not somebody needs to be arrested."

Saskatoon Police Chief Troy Cooper's department is studying the issue of decriminalizing some illicit drug possession at the request of the board of police commissioners. (Yasmine Ghania/CBC)

Last September, Regina's police board passed a motion to develop a report that would look at the feasibility of decriminalizing simple possession of drugs in Regina.

"Substance use disorder is a health problem,it's intricately woven into a larger sort of social issue as well. So [decriminalization]may be one of those tools that we would want to implement, but not in the absence of the supports," Regina Mayor Sandra Masters saidThursday.

Masters said she is looking for federal government support to expand services and hours at Regina's only safe consumption site. The Nwo Ytina Friendship Centre has a provincial exemption to operate a safe consumption site, which expires in September.

with files from Christian Paas-Lang and David Shield