
Guelph's downtown consumption and treatment site could be lesson to wary Windsor officials
CBC
Councillors and Mayor Drew Dilkens who voted against the proposed location of a drug consumption and treatment site said they were concerned about its place in the downtown core. But officials and nearby business owners opposing that site could eventually find it's a benefit to the area.
That's according to those involved with a similar site in downtown Guelph, which has been operating for the last three years.
Lindsey Sodtke is the consumption and treatment services supervisor in Guelph and she spoke in support of a site coming to Windsor at city council's meeting on Monday. In fact, she sat through all six hours of that meeting.
"I think that much like in our community, and yours as well, it's natural for people to be worried and there's going to be concerns when there's a new service," said Sodtke.
The Guelph site is set in the city's downtown core, and as Sodtke explains — as is Windsor's situation — it's because that's where people who need it are.
"What the information was telling us was that was where the overdoses were happening within our community and my understanding is for your community as well, that location is where overdoses are taking place."
At an hours-long council meeting on Monday, councillors voted 6-5 in favour of setting up the consumption and treatment site at the proposed location of 628 Goyeau St.
Dilkens voted against the location because of the proximity to nearby businesses and Detroit-Windsor tunnel.
Back in Guelph, executive director of the Downtown Guelph Business Improvement Association said he was initially skeptical of having such a site in the core, but now he sees it as a positive addition.
"It took, I think, a long time of sitting and talking as a community, as a downtown community, as a business community, for us to get our heads wrapped around what a site like this and what a service like this would actually mean," said Marty Williams.
"I was a skeptic. Leadership at the city, the mayor, was skeptical about this, and we really had to sit down together and go, 'What is this all about? What are they finding in other communities?'"
Three years late, Williams said the benefits are clear.
"What we do know is that there are fewer needles in parks and playgrounds and pathways. That there are fewer ambulance calls to emergency rooms because overdoses can be dealt with onsite," he said.
Guelph's site is on the main street in a busy intersection surrounded by businesses, said Sodtke. She said it took time, outreach, and education to calm those who were wary of the site and explain how it operates.













