News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Appeal Court Allows Safe-Injection Site To Stay Open |
Title: | CN BC: Appeal Court Allows Safe-Injection Site To Stay Open |
Published On: | 2010-01-16 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2010-01-25 23:25:40 |
APPEAL COURT ALLOWS SAFE-INJECTION SITE TO STAY OPEN
The B.C. Court of Appeal has dismissed a federal government appeal of
an exemption granted InSite, Vancouver's supervised-injection site,
which means the facility -- the first of its kind in Canada -- will
remain open.
The federal government is expected to appeal Friday's ruling, a split
2-1 decision that carries an automatic right of appeal, to the Supreme
Court of Canada.
Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said he strongly supports the ruling
and the continued operation of InSite to improve the lives of drug
addicts.
"With this second consecutive decision in favour of InSite, I hope the
federal government will drop its legal efforts so that we can go back
to focusing on InSite for what it is -- a harm-reduction facility that
saves lives and improves health outcomes for those living with
addictions," the mayor said in a statement.
Former Vancouver mayor Philip Owen also praised the ruling and
predicted similar safe-injection sites will appear in other Canadian
cities.
"We're going to have half a dozen of these across the country," he
told a cheering crowd of InSite supporters gathered outside the
Vancouver Law Courts on Friday.
"It improves public health and improves public order," said Owen, an
early supporter of a safe-injection site in order to reduce overdose
deaths and the spread of AIDS and other infectious diseases.
InSite, which opened in September 2003, was originally allowed to
operate under a temporary exemption to federal drug-control laws. The
exemption was extended twice and was scheduled to end in 2008, but a
B.C. Supreme Court judge granted a permanent exemption, ruling that
InSite should remain open because it provided a needed medical service.
The federal health minister and attorney-general of Canada appealed
that decision.
Dr. Julio Montaner, president of the International AIDS Society,
called Friday's court ruling "a tremendous victory for [those of] us
involved in the Downtown Eastside. It sends a very clear message to
[Prime Minister] Stephen Harper and his draconian policies."
New Democrat MP for Vancouver East Libby Davies told the rally that
the federal government should not waste further time and money on an
appeal.
Friday's decision was greeted with applause by InSite supporters
crowded into the normally staid courtroom, where Chief Justice Lance
Finch read a summary of the ruling. The court also found that "The
supervision of drug injection comes within the province's powers over
health under Section 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867, and the
province has exercised those powers in a number of statutes related to
the operation of InSite. As a result, the provincial and federal
exercises of power overlap."
The B.C. Court of Appeal has dismissed a federal government appeal of
an exemption granted InSite, Vancouver's supervised-injection site,
which means the facility -- the first of its kind in Canada -- will
remain open.
The federal government is expected to appeal Friday's ruling, a split
2-1 decision that carries an automatic right of appeal, to the Supreme
Court of Canada.
Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said he strongly supports the ruling
and the continued operation of InSite to improve the lives of drug
addicts.
"With this second consecutive decision in favour of InSite, I hope the
federal government will drop its legal efforts so that we can go back
to focusing on InSite for what it is -- a harm-reduction facility that
saves lives and improves health outcomes for those living with
addictions," the mayor said in a statement.
Former Vancouver mayor Philip Owen also praised the ruling and
predicted similar safe-injection sites will appear in other Canadian
cities.
"We're going to have half a dozen of these across the country," he
told a cheering crowd of InSite supporters gathered outside the
Vancouver Law Courts on Friday.
"It improves public health and improves public order," said Owen, an
early supporter of a safe-injection site in order to reduce overdose
deaths and the spread of AIDS and other infectious diseases.
InSite, which opened in September 2003, was originally allowed to
operate under a temporary exemption to federal drug-control laws. The
exemption was extended twice and was scheduled to end in 2008, but a
B.C. Supreme Court judge granted a permanent exemption, ruling that
InSite should remain open because it provided a needed medical service.
The federal health minister and attorney-general of Canada appealed
that decision.
Dr. Julio Montaner, president of the International AIDS Society,
called Friday's court ruling "a tremendous victory for [those of] us
involved in the Downtown Eastside. It sends a very clear message to
[Prime Minister] Stephen Harper and his draconian policies."
New Democrat MP for Vancouver East Libby Davies told the rally that
the federal government should not waste further time and money on an
appeal.
Friday's decision was greeted with applause by InSite supporters
crowded into the normally staid courtroom, where Chief Justice Lance
Finch read a summary of the ruling. The court also found that "The
supervision of drug injection comes within the province's powers over
health under Section 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867, and the
province has exercised those powers in a number of statutes related to
the operation of InSite. As a result, the provincial and federal
exercises of power overlap."
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