Timmins mayor encouraged by Ontario funding for homelessness and addiction hubs - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:04 AM | Calgary | -12.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Sudbury

Timmins mayor encouraged by Ontario funding for homelessness and addiction hubs

Timmins Mayor Michelle Boileau says the Ontario government must address some unique aspects of treatment in the northern, commenting on the province's new plan to address homelessness and mental health and addiction issues.

Michelle Boileau says government must address unique aspects of treatment in the north

Timmins Mayor Michelle Boileau addresses the council chambers wearing the chain of office and a yellow suit, while a judge looks on.
Timmins Mayor Michelle Boileau laments the decision to order 10 safe consumption sites to close by March 2025 and end the funding application process for others, but applauds the plan to invest $378 million for Homelessness Addiction Recovery Treatment (HART) Hubs. (City of Timmins )

TimminsMayor Michelle Boileauoffered her views on the province's plans to reduce the number of safe consumption sites and build new, full service hubs to tackle homelessness, mental health and addiction issues without supervised consumption services.

Speaking to reporters at this week'sAssociation of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO) annual meeting in Ottawa, Boileaulamentedthe decision to order 10 safe consumption sites to close by March 2025and to end the funding application process for others. Butshe applaudedthe plan to invest $378 million for Homelessness Addiction Recovery Treatment(HART) Hubs.

"It is a response to what AMO members have been asking for, and that's additional resources to be able to respond to mental health and addiction crises that we're facing in all of our communities," Boileau said.

A beige building on a downtown street with a green mural on the side.
Before its closure earlier this summer, Safe Health Site Timmins was the city's only supervised consumption site. (Jimmy Chabot/Radio-Canada)

Boileau said for Timmins,the announcement meansthe open application that was in place for a permanent safe consumptionsite will no longer be considered.

However, she addedthatat the community level, they were watching the clock tick down and had already started shifting their approach to one of building an integrated service model that would include more recovery and treatment.

Boileau saidTimmins and other northern cities have been grappling with this issue more than other communities.

"Timmins is seeing high numbers of opioid toxicity and opioid-related overdose fatalities. We've been ranked among the top 10municipalities across the province for overdose fatalities in the past few years, and Timmins isn't unique," she said.

"The five larger northern citiesTimmins, Sudbury, Thunder Bay, North Bay and Sault Ste. Marie have all been ranked among the top 10."

On the province's decision to shift away from supervised consumption sites, the mayor said she still believes they are part of the solution to the addictioncrisis.

A man enters a building on a snowy, busy street downtown Timmins.
A man enters the former Safe Health Site Timmins in March. (Jimmy Chabot/Radio-Canada)

"Medically supervised consumption sites are one part of the greater system that needs to be built to be able to address the crisis. They can be a pathway into treatment and recovery, so I do see them as being a key component to the overall network of support services that are required to address this issue," she said.

Boileaustressed that individual communities need to be included in the creation of the proposed HART Hubs.

"I, along with my colleagues at AMO, do maintain that our municipalities are best positioned to be assemble to determine what's required in our communities, what's required to meet the needs of our residents, and our local partners in order to be able to do the work that have to do on the ground."

Boileaunoted northern Ontario is also in a unique place with regard to health equity and access compared to the south.

"Northern Ontario spans a region that's larger than Italy and France combined. We do see a gap in services, and we hope that with this week's announcement, the government will be looking to fill that gap

The mayor pointedto a plan already in place in her community that could be what the Ford government has in mind for treatment centres.

"We have already developed a proposal for something similar, a wellness centre for the CochraneDistrict. It's something that we feel aligns closely with the model the government has planned. So we'll be looking forward to seeing what the application will entail and what kind of adjustments we might have to make, but our government partners have received that proposal earlier this week."