WECHU to explore options for SafePoint location after province halts new CTS site approvals - Action News
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Windsor

WECHU to explore options for SafePoint location after province halts new CTS site approvals

The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit says it's looking at what comes next for the SafePoint supervised consumption and treatment site locationafter the province declined to approve it.

Health unit says 5 lives were saved at CTS site in 8 months it was open

A sign reads SafePoint, 101 Wyandotte East.
SafePoint opened in Windsor on April 26, 2023. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit says it's looking at what comes next for the SafePoint supervised consumption and treatment site locationafter the province declined to approve it.

"While this announcement is disappointing to us, we have begun exploring what opportunities may be in place for the site and will be reaching out to our partnering agencies to determine the best path forward for our community," CEO Ken Blanchette said in a statement Wednesday.

The public health unit says it received official notice Wednesdaymorning. Itfollowsthe provincial government's Tuesday announcement that it would not be approving any future sites and closing ones within 200 metres of schools and daycares. The province also announced$378millionto fund 19 new Homelessness and Addictions Recovery Treatment (HART)hubs.

SafePoint opened on the corner ofWyandotteand GoyeauStreets inApril 2023 with the blessing ofHealth Canada as what's known as an urgent public health needs site.But it has been closed since the end of last year pending separate approval from the province, which would have come with funding.

WECHU's application was in limbofor more than a year due toa provincial review of all Ontariosites that was sparked by a fatal shooting near a Toronto CTS site.

At supervised consumption sites, people use drugs under supervision so that they can get immediate care if they overdose.

The public health unit says in thetime SafePointwas open, five overdoses were reversed on site.SafePoint had more than 1,200 visits from 249 people and237 people were referred to mental health and addictions treatment. The site also provided first aid, primary care, drug testing and social services.

"The site's true impact, however, can best be described through the stories shared by those who accessed services, such as those who were able to reconnect with family or obtain employment and housing as a result of the support they received at SafePoint," reads Blanchette's statement.

Early coroner's data shows that 128 people in Windsor-Essex died from a drug-related cause last year.

While advocates for the site say abandoning a harm-reduction approach will lead to more overdoses and deaths, downtown Coun. Renaldo Agostino, who sits on the board of health, says he's cautiously optimistic about the provincial government's announcement. He's pleased to see new money for the HART hubs.

Agostino was initially opposed to the location of SafePointand says he wanted to see what the eventual impact was, butultimately, he welcomes any actiontowardaddressing a problem he acknowledges is not simple.

"It's another step to (try)to help people. And even though it's not the step that a lot of people wanted, it's still a step in the right direction and we have to get behind it."

Agostino says he does not speak for the board, which will soon meet todiscuss the issue. Agostino wants the board to pursuea HART hub in Windsor.

"I'll be the first person in line if they're accepting applications.Tell me where to go to and I'll go there tomorrow.I think anything we can get for support is something we need."

Leslie Laframboise, an outreach worker in Windsor, isalso welcoming the province's new approach.

"I'm excited for a homeless hub, with all amenities in one spot to help the homeless and people with addiction," she said."Iwas never a big fan of the safe injection site. Ithought if you were going to have a safe injection site, it should have beenin a hub or a mobile unit and go to where the people were."

She says more treatment beds are needed to reduce the long wait people usually face.

With files from Jennifer La Grassa