logo
Tory request to curb mobile drug site ‘regressive'

Tory request to curb mobile drug site ‘regressive'

The operators of Manitoba's only mobile overdose prevention centre decried the Progressive Conservatives as 'fear-mongering' after the party's leader wrote a letter urging Ottawa to deny its application to continue providing services Thursday.
Sunshine House's Mobile Overdose Prevention Site — an RV that included a space for people to use drugs around staff members trained in harm reduction — was totalled in a hit-and-run July 2. It featured a machine that can test drugs for dangerous additives and free harm-reduction supplies.
The Salvation Army gave the organization a decommissioned ambulance to use, but Sunshine House is in the process of re-applying for the federal exemption that allows them to operate.
Tory Leader Obby Khan and PC housing, addictions and homelessness critic Carrie Hiebert said in a news release Thursday they wrote a letter urging federal Health Minister Marjorie Michel to deny that application.
Khan pointed to publicly available data showing there were fewer calls to the Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service about overdoses and fewer naloxone administrations by paramedics while the van was out of commission in July than there was in June. He suggested that shows 'the van is contributing to the number of overdoses' on city streets.
'We're just looking at putting the brakes on this,' Hiebert told the Free Press Thursday.
Data sets published by the city show the WFPS administered naloxone 466 times to 264 patients in July, compared with 619 naloxone administrations and 340 patients in June.
Hiebert said she and her colleagues are calling for an extended pause to allow for more data-gathering and analysis over the coming months. The MLA for Morden-Winkler also warned restoring services with a decommissioned ambulance could confuse users and members of the public alike about the staff and resources on board.
'We need to look at how (this program is) affecting treatment and recovery. That should be our No. 1 goal, always — treatment and recovery,' she said.
Levi Foy, Sunshine House's executive director, dismissed the comments as 'cheap political points to demonize drug users.'
The WFPS gave out a particularly high number of naloxone doses in May — 598 — and the next month. The last time there were more than 600 naloxone doses administered in a month was December 2023.
The high numbers could mean there was enough naloxone distribution in the community in July, and people might have been more aware of that and less reliant on emergency services, Foy said.
'It's naive, and it's fear mongering to say that our services are contributing to overdose deaths when it's clear our data doesn't support that,' Foy said.
'Anecdotally, the service providers who we partner with all the time, they also will say that when we're not able to operate our services, that they see a spike in responses.'
The RV required an exemption under section 56.1 of the federal Controlled Drugs and Substances Act to operate.
Summer typically has higher than usual overdose numbers. The average number of naloxone administrations from January to April 2025 was 260.
Not all naloxone and other harm reduction is reported to the WFPS, Foy noted.
'It's a very regressive and hateful kind of approach to take to this because at the end of the day, if you take this service off, and then we see a spike, then what's your solution?' Foy said.
While the vehicle is out of service, Sunshine House staff are still providing most services near its Logan Avenue building, including handing out harm-reduction supplies and allowing people to use the drug-checking machine.
In its most recent annual report, the van recorded more than 26,000 visits from Oct. 28, 2022 to Oct. 31, 2023. There were 7,086 visits to consume drugs, which resulted in 20 overdose incidents, four trips to the hospital and no deaths.
There were 81 deaths related to substance use in Manitoba in the first two months of 2025, the most recent data available show. Preliminary data show there were 570 deaths related to substance use in 2024.
— with files from Maggie Macintosh
malak.abas@freepress.mb.ca
Malak AbasReporter
Malak Abas is a city reporter at the Free Press. Born and raised in Winnipeg's North End, she led the campus paper at the University of Manitoba before joining the Free Press in 2020. Read more about Malak.
Every piece of reporting Malak produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PC leader's call to park overdose prevention van based on misleading information: Sunshine House
PC leader's call to park overdose prevention van based on misleading information: Sunshine House

CBC

time12 hours ago

  • CBC

PC leader's call to park overdose prevention van based on misleading information: Sunshine House

A Winnipeg community resource centre says data used by the leader of Manitoba's Progressive Conservatives to argue for the parking of a mobile overdose prevention site does not paint the full picture. PC Leader Obby Khan said in a news release Thursday the federal government should put the brakes on Sunshine House's overdose prevention van, citing a 25 per cent reduction in overdose calls and a 29 per cent reduction in the administration of naloxone after its first RV was taken out of service in early July. Data from the Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service does show numbers went down month-over-month, with naloxone administrations dropping from 619 in June to 466, and patient numbers sliding from 340 to 264. But Sunshine House's executive director, Levi Foy, says the figures are misleading. "That doesn't actually take into account the overdoses that we have responded to or that community partners have responded to or that community members have responded to," he said. "It's misinformation." Foy said the higher naloxone distribution in June could also indicate there may have been more kits of the opioid overdose medication out in the community that month, and that people may have had less need of emergency services. "It's really hurtful that they would come out and they would launch this type of attack against a community-based organization without actually speaking to us, without visiting our site, without having any kind of engagement or full understanding of our relationship with WFPS," he said. A city spokesperson said in an email there's often "significant fluctuations" in the data between months, and that many factors could be behind that, including drug availability, their potency, and the season. "Over the past several years, as the drug crisis has heightened, we've also seen a shift where more residents, outreach agencies and substance users are carrying/using naloxone, without calling 911," the email said. 'Let's take a look at those numbers': PC leader The mobile service, which lets people use substances under the supervision of staff trained in overdose response, first hit the road in the fall of 2022. The RV that used to offer the service was totalled on July 2 after a vehicle ran into them. The Salvation Army donated a new vehicle — a decommissioned ambulance — to Sunshine House after the hit-and-run. The PCs said in the statement they've sent a letter to the federal health minister urging he to reject an exemption allowing Sunshine House to run a mobile injection site on the ambulance. Khan is quoted as saying the data is clear, and that when the van is "taken off the road, drug activity goes down." On Friday, the Tory leader acknowledged the data goes up and down over time, but he told CBC News the party is just calling for pause to see whether the numbers stay lower. "Does this trend continue in August, in September?" he said. "Is that van actually enabling people to be stuck in this drug suspension that they're in, this addiction that they're in? So let's get more data.… We're simply saying let's take a look at those numbers." Foy said injections only represents a fraction of the services the van offers and that more than 95 per cent of services they deal with are related to inhalation and smoking, which "never stopped in that time frame." He said that the number of overdoses Sunshine House sees actually went up that month, from 11 in June to 27 in July. "I think all of the information around toxic drug supply that's being shared across the sector and with community members has really improved our abilities to not have to rely on WFPS as much," he said. "I'm really sad that … they are using this as a moment to kind of attack our services." Manitoba PCs want halt to mobile overdose prevention site 3 hours ago Sunshine House's mobile overdose prevention site is back on the streets of Winnipeg after a collision last month, but Progressive Conservative Leader Obby Khan argues the mobile program should be closed permanently.

Tory request to curb mobile drug site ‘regressive'
Tory request to curb mobile drug site ‘regressive'

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Tory request to curb mobile drug site ‘regressive'

The operators of Manitoba's only mobile overdose prevention centre decried the Progressive Conservatives as 'fear-mongering' after the party's leader wrote a letter urging Ottawa to deny its application to continue providing services Thursday. Sunshine House's Mobile Overdose Prevention Site — an RV that included a space for people to use drugs around staff members trained in harm reduction — was totalled in a hit-and-run July 2. It featured a machine that can test drugs for dangerous additives and free harm-reduction supplies. The Salvation Army gave the organization a decommissioned ambulance to use, but Sunshine House is in the process of re-applying for the federal exemption that allows them to operate. Tory Leader Obby Khan and PC housing, addictions and homelessness critic Carrie Hiebert said in a news release Thursday they wrote a letter urging federal Health Minister Marjorie Michel to deny that application. Khan pointed to publicly available data showing there were fewer calls to the Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service about overdoses and fewer naloxone administrations by paramedics while the van was out of commission in July than there was in June. He suggested that shows 'the van is contributing to the number of overdoses' on city streets. 'We're just looking at putting the brakes on this,' Hiebert told the Free Press Thursday. Data sets published by the city show the WFPS administered naloxone 466 times to 264 patients in July, compared with 619 naloxone administrations and 340 patients in June. Hiebert said she and her colleagues are calling for an extended pause to allow for more data-gathering and analysis over the coming months. The MLA for Morden-Winkler also warned restoring services with a decommissioned ambulance could confuse users and members of the public alike about the staff and resources on board. 'We need to look at how (this program is) affecting treatment and recovery. That should be our No. 1 goal, always — treatment and recovery,' she said. Levi Foy, Sunshine House's executive director, dismissed the comments as 'cheap political points to demonize drug users.' The WFPS gave out a particularly high number of naloxone doses in May — 598 — and the next month. The last time there were more than 600 naloxone doses administered in a month was December 2023. The high numbers could mean there was enough naloxone distribution in the community in July, and people might have been more aware of that and less reliant on emergency services, Foy said. 'It's naive, and it's fear mongering to say that our services are contributing to overdose deaths when it's clear our data doesn't support that,' Foy said. 'Anecdotally, the service providers who we partner with all the time, they also will say that when we're not able to operate our services, that they see a spike in responses.' The RV required an exemption under section 56.1 of the federal Controlled Drugs and Substances Act to operate. Summer typically has higher than usual overdose numbers. The average number of naloxone administrations from January to April 2025 was 260. Not all naloxone and other harm reduction is reported to the WFPS, Foy noted. 'It's a very regressive and hateful kind of approach to take to this because at the end of the day, if you take this service off, and then we see a spike, then what's your solution?' Foy said. While the vehicle is out of service, Sunshine House staff are still providing most services near its Logan Avenue building, including handing out harm-reduction supplies and allowing people to use the drug-checking machine. In its most recent annual report, the van recorded more than 26,000 visits from Oct. 28, 2022 to Oct. 31, 2023. There were 7,086 visits to consume drugs, which resulted in 20 overdose incidents, four trips to the hospital and no deaths. There were 81 deaths related to substance use in Manitoba in the first two months of 2025, the most recent data available show. Preliminary data show there were 570 deaths related to substance use in 2024. — with files from Maggie Macintosh Malak AbasReporter Malak Abas is a city reporter at the Free Press. Born and raised in Winnipeg's North End, she led the campus paper at the University of Manitoba before joining the Free Press in 2020. Read more about Malak. Every piece of reporting Malak produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Manitoba's first hyperbaric oxygen therapy hub to open
Manitoba's first hyperbaric oxygen therapy hub to open

Winnipeg Free Press

time3 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Manitoba's first hyperbaric oxygen therapy hub to open

Inside the chamber: a bed and pillow, a wrist strap, enough space for a 6 ft. 6 in. cotton gown-clad individual. Outside the chamber: Martin Hiebert, pointing to gauges and a phone attached to the vessel. 'You are in constant conversation with the patient,' Hiebert said. Ruth Bonneville / Free Press Martin Hiebert aims to open the St. James clinic at 1863 Portage Ave. on Sept. 1. Patients haven't yet laid in one of Prairie Hyperbarics' three chambers. Hiebert aims to open the St. James clinic on Sept. 1, marking Manitoba's first hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) hub. He gave the Free Press a tour of 1863 Portage Ave. ahead of time. Up to 21 clients will be treated daily. Health Canada recognizes HBOT as effective in treating 14 conditions. The range of ailments is vast — embolisms, carbon monoxide poisoning, crush injuries, decompression sickness, skin grafts. Clients will, most often, arrive with a prescription, Hiebert said. They'll enter a hyperbaric chamber room with three tubular chambers ready to pump a high concentration of oxygen into the body. Hiebert anticipates great demand: another three chambers could arrive within a year. 'The key here is to make (people) feel comfortable,' Hiebert said. Hence the TVs. Clients lying in each chamber for 80 minutes can watch movies. Meanwhile, they'll be consuming near-pure oxygen in four 15-minute stretches. Air composed of 94 per cent oxygen will circulate the enclosed tube. 'Compare it to 33 feet down in the water,' Hiebert described. 'That's the amount of pressure you get.' Ruth Bonneville / Free Press Martin Hiebert shows Prairie Hyberbarics' oxygen storage room. Those periods are broken by five-minute stretches of consuming typical breathing air, which has 21 per cent oxygen, via a supplied mask. It's a therapy that's grown since the 1950s. The goal is to 'fill the blood with enough oxygen to repair tissues and restore normal body function,' a summary by Johns Hopkins Medicine reads. Hiebert got exposed roughly eight years ago when he had prostate cancer and accompanying organ damage from its treatment. His oncologist recommended HBOT. However, there were no options in Manitoba, so Hiebert travelled to a Calgary clinic. It cost Manitoba Health around $35,000, Hiebert said. HBOT clinics have sprouted in Toronto and Vancouver. Several Canadian hospitals have hyperbaric units. Hiebert and business partner Dr. Karen Moran de Muller will run Prairie Hyperbarics, a private clinic. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba has approved Moran de Muller as the site's medical director. Still pending is the CPSM accreditation needed before the clinic can operate. The association's Manitoba Quality Assurance Program has been in communication with the clinic, spokeswoman Wendy Elias-Gagnon wrote in an email. The accreditation process hasn't been started, but CPSM will work with Prairie Hyperbarics 'once the clinic is ready.' 'We're very close,' Hiebert said. Ruth Bonneville / Free Press Health Canada recognizes HBOT as effective in treating 14 conditions. Hiebert says a session at Prairie Hyperbarics will cost roughly $600. Later, he showed a thick binder Prairie Hyperbarics must adhere by to meet medical standards. Hiebert is envisioning athletes among the clients walking through the doors. A session will cost roughly $600, he said. He underwent 35 sessions in Calgary. An average case might involve daily sessions for 30 days, he said. He's in the midst of hiring two technicians to monitor treatments. The chambers can shut down in 120 seconds if need be. Another room holds a large fire extinguisher; it can fill the chamber room in 10 seconds, Hiebert said. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba isn't aware of another accredited hyperbaric oxygen therapy chamber in the province, Elias-Gagnon confirmed. Shared Health doesn't oversee such chambers. 'We're really excited to have something at that level of innovation happening right in St. James,' said Melanie Maher, executive director of the St. James Village BIZ. 'It's really unique to bring it to the neighbourhood.' The new clinic comes with a $4.6 million start-up price tag, Hiebert said. Each Perry Baromedical hyperbaric chamber cost roughly $225,000. The clinic hasn't received government funding. Ruth Bonneville / Free Press Martin Hiebert, founder of Prairie Hyperbarics, underwent 35 HBOT sessions in Calgary eight years ago at the recommendation of his oncologist. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. Hiebert believes Prairie Hyperbarics can save Manitoba Health money. Hyperbaric therapy would only be considered insured for critical care in a tertiary facility attached to care by a specialist, a provincial spokesperson wrote in a statement. 'While the province is open to further review, non-acute treatment is not currently covered in a private clinical setting,' the spokesperson continued. Hiebert is a marketing executive, and Moran de Muller is a family doctor practising out of Crestview Medical Clinic. Other family doctors may eventually join Prairie Hyperbarics — a wing of the 4,400 sq. ft. facility holds five offices for practitioners. Gabrielle PichéReporter Gabrielle Piché reports on business for the Free Press. She interned at the Free Press and worked for its sister outlet, Canstar Community News, before entering the business beat in 2021. Read more about Gabrielle. Every piece of reporting Gabrielle produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store