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STONE – Eby’s drug decriminalization has led to drug exploitation

Premier David Eby. (Image: Govt of BC)

By TODD STONE
MLA, Kamloops-North Thompson

FOR THE LAST 15 MONTHS, the BC United Caucus has relentlessly called on the NDP to scrap their decriminalization experiment, pointing to the rapid increase of open drug use, chaos on the streets, and the devastating number of lives lost.

MLA Todd Stone.

Communities have been forced to grapple with a surge of drug-related activity, with public spaces like parks, restaurants, and even hospitals feeling unsafe.

It’s clear from what’s happening in B.C. communities that David Eby must end his reckless experiment. However, on April 26 Eby doubled down on his failed policy and his accountability for the chaos and harm it has caused.

This week, BC United Leader Kevin Falcon introduced legislation to dismantle David Eby’s reckless drug decriminalization policy – full stop. After the NDP used its majority twice to block BC United’s motions to end decriminalization previously, Kevin Falcon’s bill passed First Reading in the Legislature with support of all MLAs.

If called for debate and enacted, the bill would require the NDP government to “request in writing that the federal minister end the class exemption for adults in the province of British Columbia to possess small amounts of opioids, cocaine, methamphetamine and MDMA under Subsection 56(1) of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (Canada), on or before May 10, 2024.”

David Eby must call Kevin Falcon’s bill for debate immediately. Failure to do so would clearly show the NDP’s reluctance to be accountable for the chaos and harm this policy has caused.

This comes in light of our BC United caucus discovering online platforms selling drugs like MDMA, ketamine, and cocaine directly targeting B.C Facebook users with flashy and enticing ads. Pills on this website are being marketed directly to youth as candy with names such as “Molly Gummy Bears,” “Blue Dolphin Pill,” “Homer Simpson Pill,” and “Mickey Mouse Pill.”

The NDP’s drive to destigmatize drug use has facilitated drug exploitation. Numerous websites are now marketing illicit substances under the guise of “safe supply,” brazenly taking advantage of the lack of enforcement and regulatory oversight under the NDP.

While the NDP is ignoring the repercussions of the decriminalization experiment, south of the border in Oregon the government has acknowledged the mess caused by their own decriminalization experiment. Their state re-criminalized the possession of drugs after it saw a 52 per cent increase in overdose deaths during the first year of decriminalization.

The NDP recklessly launched this initiative without expanding the necessary treatment facilities. For over seven years, they’ve failed to increase the net-new treatment beds required to address the escalating demand.

Moreover, the 2024 budget neglects the crucial expansion of treatment and recovery services, choosing instead to merely “sustain” the current inadequate treatment programs.

BC United is committed to ending the reckless experiment and instead focusing on treatment. With BC United’s Better is Possible plan, we will prioritize comprehensive treatment and recovery efforts.

This includes providing complex mental health support, ensuring affordable and accessible treatment, and implementing awareness and educational prevention campaigns. Additionally, we are committed to stringent enforcement against drug trafficking to restore safety to B.C. communities.

For 15 months David Eby’s reckless decriminalization experiment has put our families and communities at risk. It is time we prioritize recovery and treatment and restore safety to our communities.

Todd Stone was elected MLA for Kamloops-South Thompson in 2013, 2017, and again in 2020. He currently serves as the Official Opposition House Leader as well as the Critic for Jobs, Economic Recovery, Trade and Innovation.

About Mel Rothenburger (10414 Articles)
ArmchairMayor.ca is a forum about Kamloops and the world. It has more than one million views. Mel Rothenburger is the former Editor of The Daily News in Kamloops, B.C. (retiring in 2012), and past mayor of Kamloops (1999-2005). At ArmchairMayor.ca he is the publisher, editor, news editor, city editor, reporter, webmaster, and just about anything else you can think of. He is grateful for the contributions of several local columnists. This blog doesn't require a subscription but gratefully accepts donations to help defray costs.

4 Comments on STONE – Eby’s drug decriminalization has led to drug exploitation

  1. Bill Thot // May 3, 2024 at 8:05 AM // Reply

    Drug use is rampant and it’s due to young kids listening to Rock N’ Roll, playing violent video games, watching pornography, mobile phones in schools and wearing baggy clothing.

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  2. Why not recriminalize all street drugs and only decriminalize the government’s (so-called) safer supply? And while they’re at it, add some mental-health workers and such to the government-subsidized drug flophouses in town, and build more long-term rehab facilities. Decriminalizing drug possession cost the government nothing but some time in the legislature. If they were really serious they would be financing the badly needed other supports.

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  3. Continuum // May 3, 2024 at 6:44 AM // Reply

    Decriminalization has become fodder for right-wing politicians like Kevin Falcon, so his political sinking ship demands “law and order.” The spectacle on our streets has appalled many of us. It’s time to stop politicising the problem when we know its main origin is the breakdown in society, family and the modern lifestyle. In the present-day society unachieved goals and expectations drive young people to drugs and crime. If we want to do away with crime, we must do away with the conditions which produce it. 

    Modern society through the media glamorizes drugs, sex, guns, alcohol, fast cars, infidelity, and gluttony and much of this one can see all day on several TV sets in their homes. This desensitises morality and many, mostly young men, want to share in it and when they get hooked on drugs they become a cash cow for doctors, lawyers and the bureaucracy. When politicians seek to capitalize on the street scene, they trot out Eby’s “little green men” to blame in order to get re-elected, which in the end is a betrayal of our trust. They have had ample opportunity while in power to address the issue, now they just want to recycle failure that they put in place while in power.

    We cannot place all of our blame on the lawyers, judges, policemen, the press and the bureaucracy since they are all working in the same system functioning by rules made by the collective will of the society for another time and place. This system produces victims and must be reformed and taken out of the hands of lawyers and the Ministry who in the end really don’t care because to many of them you are just a number on their invoice.

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