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Windsor councillor wants city to withdraw support for supervised drug consumption site

The Windsor city councillor for the downtown area wants council to reverse courseon the proposedsupervised drug consumptionsite after a slim majority gavethe project its blessing last spring.

Renaldo Agostino wants to see other options explored, including a mobile unit

Coun. Renaldo Agostino being interviewed.
Coun. Renaldo Agostino wants Windsor city council to reconsider the supervised injection site. (Dale Molnar/CBC)

The Windsor city councillor for the downtown area wants council to reverse courseon the proposedsupervised drugconsumption and treatment services (CTS) site despitea slim majority of council givingthe project its blessing last spring.

Ward 3 Coun. Renaldo Agostino has put forward a motionaskingcouncil to rescind its support for the site, a drop-in facility where people can use drugs under supervision, learn about harm reduction and get access to social supports.

"My issue is with the location of it. I believe we need one [a CTS site], desperately," Agostino said in an interview on CBC Radio's Afternoon Drive.

Agostinowants to see city administration and theWindsor-Essex County Health Unit(WECHU) report back on other options to provide the service, including a mobile unit and including the site within theHousing and Homeless Help Hub.

Agostino said he's heard privacy concerns from the community about people having to access the site straight from Wyandotte Street as opposed to entering the site fromwithin an existing service provider.

Agostino's motion, which will be addressed at Monday's city councilmeeting, states that there is "ongoing and significant concern" about the impact of a supervised consumption site at the proposed downtown location at the corner of Wyandotte Street Eastand Goyeau Street.

It goes on to point out that the siteis close to aMcDonald's and other businesses, including a hotel,as well asthe entrance to the Windsor-Detroit Tunnel.

A manager attheQuality Inn and Suitestold CBCNewsthat she wants to see people get help but opposes the location.

"Our establishment hasalways been totally against it," said Daniella Maceroni, director of sales.

"We're not against the [safe] injection plan. We're against the location because we already have a big major issue and this area, and all of downtown area, and I just think it's just going to make things worse."

Ward 2 Coun. Fabio Costantesaid that no matter where the site is located, thereis going to be some opposition. But he saidevidence shows these sites don't contribute to a rise in crime.

He saidthat the site is one part of a strategy to address some of the issues that residents and businesses seearound addiction, homelessness and mental health in the downtown, and added that there's a safety plan in place to address any concerns.

"We absolutely need to move forward," said Costante, who was recently elected chair of the board of health, but spoke in his capacity as a councillor.

"Every day that we delay this project is a day that we are not providing a service in our community that could save people's lives."

Agostino was elected Ward 3 councillor in lastOctober's municipal election.

Five months prior, in May,city council passed a motion to support the health unit's applications to upper levels of government.

Council was divided on the issue. The motionpassed in a 6-5 vote, and Mayor Drew Dilkens was among those who voted against it.

That motion noted that opioid-related deaths in Windsor-Essex are at their highest recorded levels.

In 2021, 86 people lost their lives to overdoses, according to provincial data.

A brick storefront with windows covered in paper.
The proposed location for the supervised drug consumption site at 101 Wyandotte St. E. in Windsor, Ont. (TJ Dhir/CBC)

In a statement, WECHU said that there was extensive consultation over four years that involved more than 3,000 interactions with residents, businesses and others, and it invited the public to review the results of those consultations.

"We look forward to continuing the education process for our elected officials and members of the public related to this important service," the public health unit said.

The health unit heldthree virtual town hall forumsthis week on the matter.

In 2021, WECHUconducted public consultations on two locations:the 101 Wyandotte location and628 Goyeau St. There was no clear preference among the public, according to a survey, but the health unit ultimately chose the Goyeau location.

When the lease for that property fell through, the health unit went with 101 Wyandotte St.

WECHU says the site, to becalled Safepoint, could open as soon as the end of March, though that remainscontingent upon federal and provincial approvals.

With files from TJ Dhir and Afternoon Drive