
As Niagara Region’s only safe drug consumption site faces closure, advocates fear more people will die
CBC
Advocates fear the looming closure of the Niagara Region's sole safe drug consumption site will result in a spike in overdose deaths and cases of blood-borne infections such as hepatitis C and HIV.
The Health Ministry informed Positive Living Niagara, which operates Consumption and Treatment Services (CTS), that Ontario government funding for the St. Catharines site would end in 90 days.
“There will be people who die because of this,” Talia Storm, program director of Positive Living's StreetWorks program, said in an interview.
CTS is among seven supervised drug consumption sites in Ontario set to have their funding cut in the coming weeks.
On Monday, Health Minister Sylvia Jones said in a news release that the province is now focusing on treatment and recovery from addiction through Homelessness and Addiction Recovery Treatment (HART) Hubs. The government "remains clear that the focus must be on treatment, recovery and safer communities," the release said.
Last year, 10 other sites, including the only one in Hamilton, were forced to close due to a new rule introduced in 2024 that bans these facilities within 200 metres of schools or daycares.
Storm said 100 per cent of CTS's funding comes from the province, so Positive Living plans to close the site.
The consequences, based on what has happened in other Ontario communities where safe consumption sites have been shuttered, won't be pretty, Storm said.
"The outcome has been quite terrible in those communities in terms of public substance use, increased overdoses, increased deaths and increased syringes in the community."
At CTS Niagara, which is open daily, people bring their own supply of street drugs to inject or consume them under the watchful eyes of Niagara Emergency Medical Services paramedics, who are trained to respond immediately to any overdose.
According to Positive Living Niagara, since CTS opened in 2018, there have been 89,000 visits by people looking for a safe way to use drugs they say they need due to their addictions. During that time, at least 1,520 overdoses have been reversed.
Harini Sivalingam, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association’s equity program director, said funding cuts to safe consumption sites and the resulting closures will make it more difficult for people with addictions to access "essential, life-saving" health services.
Shuttering the sites in the midst of an opioid crisis is foolhardy, Sivalingam said.
"The loss of funding for these services will disproportionately harm already marginalized communities, including Indigenous and racialized people, as well as those experiencing poverty and homelessness, who face systemic barriers to accessing health care and other supports."

As the province doubled down on its “tough on crime” measures and calls for federal bail reform this week, rates of violence across Ontario jails — both inmate-on-inmate and inmate-on-staff assaults — are rising, according to an analysis of data shared with CBC News by the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU).












