Moms Stop The Harm

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Governments have the power to save lives today!

January 15, 2023 by Guest User

On April 14, 2016 British Columbia declared a public health emergency in response drug poisoning deaths. Since that time, the unregulated drug supply has become more toxic and more unpredictable.

And since that time, at least 11,000 people in British Columbia have died.

Read More
January 15, 2023 /Guest User

Why should you sign up to our new database?

December 20, 2022 by Petra Schulz

Why the change?

When we began and were a much smaller organization we collected membership information via google forms and a spreadsheet, which worked at the time, but was very manual and time-consuming, and also not as secure as our current database. We have also applied to become a charitable organization and have to meet certain requirements, including data protection. The reason for the change is to protect you while allowing us to grow and become stronger as an organization.

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December 20, 2022 /Petra Schulz

Still Dying for Access

November 30, 2022 by Petra Schulz

Our Alberta advocates together with their allies from Albertans for Ethical Drug Policy rallied for #safesupply at the Alberta legislature, on the opening day of the fall session. About fifty people braved frigid Alberta temperatures and stayed warm with chants, including “safe supply or we die” and “If you are not angry, you are not paying attention.”

Coinciding with the re-opening of the Alberta Legislature, this rally is a call for the government to take urgent action on the ongoing drug poisoning crisis that continues to kill more Albertans aged 25 to 39 than any other cause of death. Many of our moms carried poster-size images of the children they lost, others brought signs and photos.

To highlight the need to prevent harm and death that comes from toxic street drugs we handed out a safe regulated supply at the rally and provided a sample to all MLAs. While our sample, consisting of caffeine, would not make the best cup of coffee, we hoped it might support some critical thinking.

Read More
November 30, 2022 /Petra Schulz

Update On Our Stronger Together Retreat In Edmonton

October 18, 2022 by Petra Schulz in Support Groups, Substance Use, Addiction

After two long years and many ZOOM meetings, our Stronger Together Canada team finally had a chance to meet in person in Edmonton on October 14th and 15th, 2022. It makes such a difference to make these connections in person.

On the first day, the Stronger Together teams from across Canada conducted joint strategic planning to take our programs to the next level. Planning started with celebrating successes and accomplishments, including the growth of both programs across the country for both online and in-person Healing Heart and Holding Hope groups.

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October 18, 2022 /Petra Schulz
#StongerTogetherCanada, #momsstoptheharm
Support Groups, Substance Use, Addiction
Comment
Edmonton High Level Bridge
307084830_1122587895016476_2703091561632316588_n.jpg
End Overdose Banner on Overpass
Electronic Billboard
CN Tower Toronto
Purple Chair Campaign
Samuel-de-Champlain bridge, Montreal, QC
download (4).jpg

International Overdose Awareness Day - success or a sign of the crisis?

September 27, 2022 by Guest User

Our community is growing, not only in numbers but in the strengths of our voice and message that urgent change is needed.  At no other time of the year is that more evident than during International Overdose Awareness Day (IOAD). 

This year we had more participation in more communities than ever before. Moms Stop The Harm (MSTH) members organized or participated in over fifty events across the country from Victoria to Saint John's NL. Our largest gatherings were in Victoria, where 300 people joined the event and in Edmonton, where our local Healing Hearts group organized a vigil with over 500 people in attendance. Most events were focused on remembrance, giving us a chance to grieve together, while our team in Victoria also organized a noisy protest in front of BC government buildings, with our co-founder Leslie McBain giving a powerful speech. 

For several years now we have raised awareness of overdose, or more precisely the drug poisoning crisis by having civic and public buildings, as well as other structures lit in the IOAD colour purple. We have had Rogers Place arena lit in Vancouver, the High Level Bridge in Edmonton, Mosaic Stadium in Regina, and the CN Tower in Toronto, just to name a few. This year our advocates worked hard to add two more important symbols, namely the Samuel Champlain Bridge (the first time for a structure to be lit in Quebec) and then in a very meaningful way the Human Rights Museum in Winnipeg. 

Our allies with Overdose Awareness Manitoba (OAM), led by our Manitoba director Arlene Kolb, always look for new ways to bring home the message that our loved ones who died are not numbers, but people who are dearly missed in our lives. This year they started the Purple Chair for Overdose Awareness campaign and invited us to partner.  So many of you participated and it was powerful and heartbreaking to see the images of purple chairs from across the country. Together with OAM, we shared the images on social media, regularly tagging the politicians, first among our Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. We even mailed a child sized chair to Carolyn Bennett, the federal Minister for Mental Health and Addictions. The purple chair campaign resonated across the country. Our advocates in Mission, BC, including our BC director Traci Letts who had their first IOAD event this year had an incredible display of 150 purple chairs!

In addition to the purple chairs, we continued to tie purple ribbons with photos of loved ones lost to trees, lampposts, fences and other structures. Our teams in Victoria and Vancouver placed ribbons in prominent places across the city, as did members in other communities from coast to coast.  Once again we bought billboards with overdose awareness messages, including in some smaller communities across the country.

Any other organization would call this a successful event, but I hesitate to do so. How many people participated, painting chairs, tying ribbons, and sharing photos and heartfelt messages to me is a sign of the gowning number of us who live with the pain and grief of having lost a loved one, or worry about losing someone. It is als a sign of the ongoing government failure at all levels of government. The year my youngest son Danny died, in 2014, 128 Albertans lost their lives to toxic drugs, in 2021 over 1800 families joined the mourning.  The same increase in death toll is seen across the country, with Indigenous communities disproportionally affected. 

The theme for IOAD is “A time to remember, a time to act”. We remember each and every minute of every day, and we call on politicians to stop talking and finally to act. We don’t want your thoughts, prayers and tears, we want to see real change!

First and foremost we need a safe regulated supply to replace toxic street drugs for everyone. We need to stop criminalizing people who use drugs. We need to make sure that all Canadians have access to life-saving harm reduction services and evidence-based treatment. At the same time, we need to work to address the underlying issues, such as mental health, trauma, poverty, the lack of affordable and supportive housing, discrimination, and importantly the effects of colonization. 

We have an opportunity to use the momentum gained during IOAD to get our name and our message out. Keep up the pressure. As parliament and provincial legislatures return from summer breaks that saw 21 Canadians die a preventable death every day politicians took off, they need to hear from all of us. It is over time when it comes to action. Be sure to let them know!

Petra Schulz, forever Danny’s mom, founding director and board chair.

Saskatchewan IOAD
Human Rights Museum - Winnipeg, MB
Temporary Tattoos - Edmonton, AB
Numbers of overdose deaths climbing in Alberta
Over 1,000 people have died due to toxic illicit drugs in B.C. in the first half of 2022
Peterborough IOAD Event
Remembering our loved ones lost to overdose
Medicine Hat, Alberta
September 27, 2022 /Guest User
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