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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PM Coy On Injection Site
Title:CN BC: PM Coy On Injection Site
Published On:2006-04-27
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-08-18 14:07:49
PM COY ON INJECTION SITE

Mayor Sam Sullivan Meets Harper But Receives No Clear Commitments

Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan said after a meeting with Prime Minister
Stephen Harper Wednesday that the Tory leader had given no clear
indication of the future of Canada's first safe-injection site for
heroin users in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

"We only spoke for 15 minutes on a variety of topics," Sullivan said
of his Ottawa meeting with Harper. "He made no commitment one way or another."

The mayor said he got the impression that Harper knows where he
stands on the issue, "and that he was not interested in getting in the way."

Sullivan added that Harper "seemed to leave the door open for further
discussions" and invited him to phone him after the budget comes down.

Harper had criticized the Liberal-endorsed pilot project at an early
campaign event during the 2006 election, but Sullivan said earlier
this week he received private assurance later in the campaign that
Harper had no plans to withdraw federal approval of the initiative.

"We discussed his commitment during the campaign - that he did not
want to facilitate drug use but he was interested in the local
innovations that come forward, and he's open to them," Sullivan said.

"So I basically feel very comfortable about that position. And also
he stated that he wasn't interested in trying to get in the way of
existing innovations."

The pilot project was launched on Sept. 15, 2003 after Health Canada
accepted the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority's application for an
exemption under the Controlled Drug and Substances Act.

Health Canada said this week the government will consider extending
the exemption when it expires later this year after assessing whether
the program is successful "in reducing risk behaviours like drug
overdose, needle sharing, public use of drugs and in reducing the
probability of disease transmission."

Sullivan, who plans to travel to Ottawa regularly to push the city's
issues to Harper and his ministers, urged the prime minister to hold
a full cabinet meeting in Vancouver. The mayor said Harper "was very
intrigued by the invitation."

Carolyn Stewart Olsen, Harper's press secretary, said the prime
minister wasn't available to comment publicly on the meeting. She did
confirm that Sullivan, a Conservative party supporter, is the first
Canadian mayor to have a private meeting with Harper.

Sullivan presented Harper with the Olympic and Paralympic flags given
to Canada at the recent games in Turin.

Olympic organizers and the B.C. government are pushing the Harper
government to provide $55 million in next week's budget to cover a cost overrun.
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