The debate around cohabitation continues following the tabling of Bill 103 by the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) government this week, which aims to limit the distance between supervised drug consumption sites from schools and daycares.
“It does nothing to address the needs of the children of our community,” Montreal’s St. Henri neighborhood resident Michael MacKenzie told Global News, though he agrees with what the proposed legislation is trying to achieve.The bill requires such facilities to be at least 150 metres away from schools and daycares, and follows complaints from some St. Henri residents after the Benoit Labre housing complex opened last year. It allows supervised drug use less than 100 metres away from an elementary school.“The largest issue has been the exposure of our children to violence and sexual acts, including coercive sexual acts witnessed on the sidewalks after school, acts right in the school yard,” MacKenzie said, echoing similar complaints from other residents and groups. Story continues below advertisement
if ( typeof( gn_monetize ) !== 'undefined' && typeof( gn_monetize.Ads ) !== 'undefined' && gn_monetize.Ads.initialRequestMade() ) {
// Ads script has been loaded, create the ad.
gn_monetize.Ads.create( {"sizes":"[300,250]","biddable":true,"id":"gpt-ad-300250-10","lazy":false,"targeting":{"pos":10,"slotid":"gpt-ad-300250-10"},"companion":false} );
} else {
// if Ads script not yet loaded, queue up ad data for initialization.
var gnAdSettings = gnAdSettings || {};
gnAdSettings.ads = gnAdSettings.ads || [];
gnAdSettings.ads.push( {"sizes":"[300,250]","biddable":true,"id":"gpt-ad-300250-10","lazy":false,"targeting":{"pos":10,"slotid":"gpt-ad-300250-10"},"companion":false} );
}
Aspects of the bill have the support of the opposition Liberals, who tabled a similar one last fall, Bill 892, to address complaints from St. Henri residents.
Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
Sign up for breaking National newsletter
Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.
“While we believe, obviously, injection and inhalation sites are important for people who have addiction issues,” said the party’s social services critic Elizabeth Prass, “it shouldn’t be to the detriment of children.”However, some harm reduction advocates, like James Hughes who runs the Old Brewery Mission, worry that the 150-metre restriction might be too strict given Montreal’s many densely-populated neighbourhoods.
More on Canada
More videos
What to know about search for 2 missing siblings in rural Nova Scotia
No interprovincial trade barriers by Canada Day? Why Carney faces uphill battle
PowerSchool hack: School boards face new ransom demands months after leak
Assaults, bomb threats, Nazi salutes: Canada’s courts are starting to convict those targeting Jews
‘They were laughing at me’: Female complainant tells world junior sex assault jury
Search for missing siblings in Pictou County enters 5th day
Former Canadian diplomat on Carney-Trump White House meeting
Carney’s visit to Washington for face-to-face meeting redefining relationship with Trump
“There’s a lot of daycares and a lot of schools in this city, and fantastic organizations that are running these essential services will now be restricted,” he argued.“We may be denying ourselves the creation of fabulous important services that actually have the result of reducing cohabitation problems.”Hughes believes it is possible to have a well-run facility regardless of distance to a school.The City of Montreal agrees that density needs to be taken into consideration. Both their officials and those at Benoit Labre are studying the bill. If it becomes law, the latter will have four years to move the drug consumption service, which MacKenzie says is too long to tolerate.
Trending Now
Former Quebec junior hockey player Noah Corson sentenced to 2 years of jail time in sex-assault case
New pope elected to lead Catholic Church
“The harms will continue to happen to the children of our community,” he said. Story continues below advertisement
if ( typeof( gn_monetize ) !== 'undefined' && typeof( gn_monetize.Ads ) !== 'undefined' && gn_monetize.Ads.initialRequestMade() ) {
// Ads script has been loaded, create the ad.
gn_monetize.Ads.create( {"sizes":"[300,250]","biddable":true,"id":"gpt-ad-300250-11","lazy":true,"targeting":{"pos":11,"slotid":"gpt-ad-300250-11"},"companion":false} );
} else {
// if Ads script not yet loaded, queue up ad data for initialization.
var gnAdSettings = gnAdSettings || {};
gnAdSettings.ads = gnAdSettings.ads || [];
gnAdSettings.ads.push( {"sizes":"[300,250]","biddable":true,"id":"gpt-ad-300250-11","lazy":true,"targeting":{"pos":11,"slotid":"gpt-ad-300250-11"},"companion":false} );
}
With more sites needed to curb the overdose crisis, social services minister Lionel Carmant agreed Tuesday that the sites need to be established securely.“You know, we’ve increased from four to 14 since the pandemic, the number of sites,” he told reporters after the bill was tabled.Many say they worry the complaints and clashes over cohabitation will only get worse if a solution isn’t found.
1:59
Ontario judge calls lawyers back for supervised consumption site case