Support The Bill To Decriminalize People Who Use Drugs!

Our co-founders Leslie McBain and Petra Schulz wrote a letter to Justin Trudeau in February to request his support for a private members bill called C-216 that would, if passed, decriminalize personal drug possession and take a number of other important steps towards ending our country’s cruel and unsuccessful war on drugs.

Those of us who have seen this crisis firsthand know the devastation caused by the criminalization of substance use. Individuals, families and communities are harmed and too many die when the stigma of criminalization causes them to use drugs alone.

While we sent a letter to the Prime Minister, we feel strongly that this issue should not be partisan, but that this bill deserves support from all sides of the House of Commons.

All MPs need to know this and you can help by forwarding our letter to the Prime Minister (along with a short note saying you would like your MP to support Bill C-216.) Or you can use the following text or edit as you see fit to your MP:

Dear [Name of your MP]

I am writing to request that you support  Bill C-216, An Act to amend the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act and to enact the Expungement of Certain Drug-related Convictions Act and the National Strategy on Substance Use Act.

Measures taken to date to address the overdose crisis have failed. The results of this failure are heartbreaking in the extreme. About 25,000 Canadians have died since 2016, according to official figures that are at least seven months out of date, but we know that every day 20 Canadians die from fatal drug poisoning.

I am calling for bold action to end these preventable deaths and believe that Bill C-216 is the kind of action required. Also, I strongly believe that all parties need to work together to get this bill passed. It should not be viewed as a partisan issue but as a necessary step towards ending this unbearable crisis.

Bill C-216 will help save lives. I urge you to support it. . 

Regards

[Your name]

You can find the email of your MP by searching this page using your postal code.

We need bold action and we must all be part of it. NOW!

Call For Urgent Action On The Drug Poisoning Crisis In Edmonton!

Hello Edmonton and area members and MSTH supporters,

Below you will find a draft of an email ready to send to Edmonton Mayor Sohi and City Council members. Just click on the text below and it should open into an email document for you.

You can edit it before you send it. Make sure to add your name to the bottom of the email.

Thank you for your support!

Dear Mayor and Council,


First of all, let me congratulate you on your recent election win. I know you must have a lot on your plate but I hope to draw your attention to the ongoing drug poisoning crisis that is taking too many lives in our city.


This is very personal to me, as my family has been affected by substance use-related harms. I am a supporter or member of Moms Stop The Harm, which is a coalition of families who mourn a loved one or have a loved one with lived or living experience.  


As the newly elected mayor and councillors of Edmonton, I urge you to take immediate action to prevent further loss of life and to remind you of the following:  


In March of this year, the then Edmonton city council, under the guidance of Scott McKeen, passed a two-part resolution as follows: 



Recently released substance use surveillance data [https://www.alberta.ca/substance-use-surveillance-data.aspx] show us that the rate of drug poisoning deaths in Edmonton continues to increase. This could be immediately addressed by re-opening the Boyle Street Community services consumption site with emergency funding from the City of Edmonton. They currently have a  federal exemption, but the province cut their funding. Once that site is open again the city needs to also explore other locations where there is a need for a consumption site, based on neighbourhood-level data for drug poisoning events and emergency response utilization. In planning these services, it is important to provide options for those who use other routes of consumption, such as inhalation, and provide services that meet the needs of this population. Supervised consumption services save lives.


We also know that over 90% of all poisoning deaths are attributed to an increasingly toxic street drug supply, yet iOAT, a program in Edmonton that provides individuals with complex substance use disorder a safe pharmaceutical alternative, is running below capacity and not taking new patients, again because of the provincial government’s ideological interventions. The city must immediately request that the province of Alberta expand its iOAT program to the full capacity and accept new patients.


I hope that Mayor Sohi and the new council members will engage in a conversation with the Federal government and continue to follow the resolution that was passed by the previous council to seek funding for programs to address the drug poisoning crisis. 


The recent civic election and the support that this new council is showing towards the drug poisoning crisis gives me hope that we will see change, which we need because the alternative has more Edmontonian families planning funerals for their loved ones and joining the ranks of the grieving. 


Regards,