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OPINION

YOUR PERSPECTIVE: Stop the open drug use in public places, protect our families

Apr 26, 2023 | 8:00 AM

For many, getting behind Premier David Eby’s plan to decriminalize hard drugs came with the expectation that the proper protections, such as training and treatment, would be in place. Mothers like Andrea Miller, whose daughter Everleigh found a packet of fentanyl at her elementary school playground in Nanaimo, learned this wasn’t the case the hard way.

Decriminalizing hard drugs without proper guardrails has exposed our communities to the dangers of uncontrolled consumption in public areas. While simple activities like having a beer in a public park or using a plastic straw are tightly regulated, the government’s decriminalization policy has left the public consumption of lethal drugs like crystal meth, crack cocaine, and fentanyl unchecked.

After six years and two terms of this NDP government, the results are more crime and social disorder, a continued and tragic increase in overdose deaths, and more violence than ever before. Now, innocent children are exposed to public drug use in places that are supposed to be for kids and families to safely enjoy — it’s simply unacceptable.

Parents fear taking their young children downtown or even to school, as public safety in Premier Eby’s B.C. worsens. A recent research poll by Leger shows that concerns about public safety in our province are higher than anywhere else in Canada, and this shouldn’t surprise anyone.

The government’s utter failure to ensure the right protections are in place is now forcing municipal governments like Penticton, Kelowna, New Westminster, Kamloops, and Campbell River to try to put some controls in place and stop the consumption of hard drugs in public places like parks, beaches and playgrounds. Unfortunately, not only did the Premier fail to implement the safeguards when pushing decriminalization through, but his former employer Pivot Legal Society is putting up legal challenges against municipalities trying to protect their communities.

Kevin Falcon and the BC United Caucus have been standing with municipalities like Penticton, which have to manage this escalating crisis with no provincial support. Nicole Clark, President of the Penticton Chamber of Commerce, said, “[we] do not have outreach workers [for] those suffering from addiction into treatment. Now they want us to hold off putting restrictions?” It’s hard not to see the nonsense in the government’s approach.

It’s time for the Premier to show leadership and implement a province-wide ban on the consumption of hard drugs like crystal meth and crack cocaine in public spaces which young children and families frequent. And until then, government needs to allow municipalities to ban certain harmful activities in specific places to avoid more young children being exposed to drugs and related paraphernalia, putting them in danger.

As Ray Bernoties, former Chief of the Oak Bay Police Department and a former Chief Superintendent in the RCMP, put it — “Drug usage must be prohibited from parks and beaches. That was among many caveats to my support, as a Police Chief, for [decriminalization]. When kids don’t matter, you’ve lost the plot.”

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Editor’s Note: This opinion piece reflects the views of its author, and does not necessarily represent the views of Fraser Valley Today or Pattison Media.