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Windsor

Woman who lost brother to opioids relieved police to carry naloxone but wonders what changed?

Chief Pam Mizuno says decision is connected to officers working at emergency homeless shelters, but advocates question the explanation and wonder why it took so long.

Advocates have called for Windsor officers to carry the drug for years amid rising overdoses

Candice McCowin's brother Graeme McLean died of an opioid overdose in late 2018. Years later, she's relieved police in Windsor will carry naloxone, but wonders what changed to lead to the decision. (CBC)

Candice McCowin's brother GraemeMcLean died of an opioid overdose three years ago.

For three years she's been among advocates calling for Windsor police to carry naloxone.

For three years she's felt ignored.

Now, with news hundreds of frontline officers are being trained to use the drug,McCowinsaid she'srelieved.

But one question lingers.

"What was the deciding factor? What makes all the lives moving forward more important than my brother's was or people before him?"

In the past the departmentsaid data didn't support officers being equipped with naloxone which can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose.

Meanwhile, statistics from the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit(WECHU) show thenumber of opioid-related emergency room visitshave climbed steadily.

There were 249 opioid-relatedvisits in 2019, more than three times greater than the 78 that were tallied in 2007, according to WECHU. Twenty-nine were reportedin January 2021.

This chart shows the rise in opioid-related emergency department visits in Windsor-Essex in recent years. (Windsor-Essex County Health Unit)

Late last week Mayor Drew Dilkens, chair of theservice's board, said Police Chief Pam Mizuno had decided to make a change.

On Tuesday the chief said more than 275 patrol and investigative officers have alreadylearnedto administer the Narcan nasal spray version of thedrug and that training is ongoing. There are roughly 500 frontline officers in the service.

"Our officers being deployed at the emergency shelters for people who are experiencing homelessness, as well as the recovery centres. I think that changes it," Mizuno said in explaining her decision and the timing of it, adding the kits are being provided to the service for free.

While the chief cites the shelters set up amid COVID-19 outbreaks as a difference, it's not clear how interacting with users there will be different from the waysofficers would interact with people while regularlypatrolling the community.

Explanation a 'bit of a shock'

Bruce Chapman,president of the Police Association of Ontario (PAO),expressed surprisewhen asked about the explanation.

"[It's] a little bit of shock I guess," he said.

"There are countless cases of police personnel during their regular patrols coming across individuals who have suffered an overdose and saving their lives. I could give you 20 examples across the province and that happens every day."

Last month, for example, OPP issued a media release stating ithas saved 210 lives using naloxone since its officers started using it in 2017.

Others, including Windsor West MPP Lisa Gretzky, have suggested police linkingtheir decision to the emergency shelter serves to stigmatize people experiencing homelessness.

It's a view McCowin shares.

"[Police]didn't decide to come to this determination because we have a crisis," she said.

"They're coming to this determination because there's stigma attached to homeless people and they're going to be working around them so now it's important."

The chief said the service does not want to further stigmatize people with addictions, noting the majority ofoverdose calls police respond to are at private residences.

Officers haveused naloxone twice this year

Mizuno also pointed to"stress" on emergency systems in the city during thepandemic and apair of community alerts from the Windsor-Essex Community Opioid and Substance Strategy.

One of the alerts was in response to 22 fentanyl-related visits to the emergency room in just one week, including 16 overdoses, numbers described as "extremely high."

"All of those things in totality have certainly led to the decision," said the chief.

The PAOrepresents officers at dozens of police services, including Windsor, and has beenpushingdepartments to carry the drug since 2019.

Chapman said as far as he's aware Windsor is the last large department to do so.

Bruce Chapman, Police Association of Ontario president, said Windsor police should have started carrying naloxone a long time ago. (Radio-Canada)

"It should have been done a long time ago. It's unfortunate it wasn't," he said.

"Who knows how many lives could have been saved. We don't know the answer to that, but we do know as a result of the decision Windsor has finally made that there will be lives saved."

A CBCanalysis of police reportswhere officers responded and naloxone was administered between November2018 and December 2019 found that onat least 14 occasions, Windsor policearrived first to the scene of a drug overdosewithout naloxone in-hand.

The chief said police still consider an overdose a medical emergency that is best responded to by medical personnel such as paramedics.

She also statedshe believes no one has died because policedidn't havethe drugin the past.

"Our officers have not attended a scene where, and of course you cannot definitivelysay, but where a life has been lost because our officers have not been carrying naloxone. That has not happened."

Up until this decision, Windsor police hadofficers with just three units detention, city centre patrol andproblem-oriented policing that hadaccess to the drug.

Officers equipped with naloxonein those units have already used it twice this year, according to Mizuno.

McCowin saidthe decision from police could mean another family is spared the pain she carries.

Graeme McLean was sober for more than 100 days before his fatal overdose. (Supplied by Candice McCowin)

Graeme was the baby of the family, a"joker," who was helpful and "larger than life" with a wife, baby and job before he became addicted.

But years of hearing police give reasons not to carry naloxone left her questioning whether his death meant anything.

She can't shake that feeling, even now.

"I just thought. 'There isn't a need? I think if it was only one person, my brother, or whoever, there should have been a need,'" she explained.

"Think about how many people have died in the city of Windsor from opioid overdose."