Skip to main content
Start of content
Start of content

441-00924 (Health)

Paper petition

Original language of petition: English

PETITION TO THE HOUSE OF COMMONS IN PARLIAMENT ASSEMBLED

We, the undersigned residents of Canada, draw the attention of the House of Commons in Parliament Assembled to the following:

Whereas:

Over 29,000 Canadians have died due to apparent opioid toxicity between January 2016 and December 2021. Those who have died as a result of the preventable drug toxicity crisis were loved and valued citizens of this country: our children, siblings, spouses, parents, family members, clients, friends; and

Canada's current drug policies have proven to be ineffective in the prevention of substance use and exacerbate substance use harms and risks. The "war on drugs" has resulted in widespread stigma towards those who use controlled substances. The "war on drugs" has allowed organized crime to be the sole provider of most controlled substances. Problematic substance use is a health issue and that cannot be resolved through criminalizing personal possession and consumption. Decriminalization of personal possession is associated with significantly reducing drug toxicity deaths in the countries that have adopted progressive drug policy reforms.

Therefore, we, the undersigned, citizens of Canada, call upon the Government of Canada to:

1. Reform drug policy to decriminalize simple possession of drugs listed in the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act;

2. Provide a path for expungement of conviction records for those convicted of simple possession; and

3. With urgency, implement a health-based National Strategy for providing access to a regulated safer supply of drugs and expand trauma-informed treatment, recovery, and harm reduction services, and public education and awareness campaigns throughout Canada.

Response by the Minister of Mental Health and Addictions and Associate Minister of Health

Signed by (Minister or Parliamentary Secretary): Élisabeth Brière

The Government of Canada remains deeply concerned about the devastating impact that the toxic illegal drug overdose crisis continues to have across the country. We have lost too many Canadians to overdose and countless other lives have been forever altered.

Our approach to the overdose crisis has been comprehensive, collaborative, and compassionate, guided by our federal drug strategy – the Canadian Drugs and Substances Strategy (CDSS). The CDSS takes a public health-focused approach and lays out our framework for evidence-based actions to reduce the harms associated with substance use in Canada.

The Government of Canada recognizes that substance use is a health issue and is supporting policies and approaches that divert people who use drugs away from the criminal justice system and toward appropriate health and social services. For example:

  • The Good Samaritan Drug Overdose Actwas passed into law in May 2017, providing some legal protection from simple drug possession charges for individuals who seek emergency help during an overdose.
  • In August 2020, the Public Prosecution Service of Canada issued guidance to prosecutors directing that alternatives to prosecution should be considered for personal possession offences, except when there are public safety concerns.
  • In September 2020, to help decrease stigma during police interactions with people who use drugs, Public Safety Canada launched an online training module specifically designed for law enforcement members. The training raises awareness of the harms associated with substance use stigma and provides frontline law enforcement members with practical tools to support their interactions with people who use drugs.
  • On November 17, 2022, Bill C-5, which made legislative amendments to the Criminal Code and to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA), received Royal Assent. Among other measures, Bill C-5 encourages the use of diversion measures for personal drug possession offences, such as referral to health and social services, rather than laying a criminal charge. These amendments repealed mandatory minimum penalties for certain offences in the CDSA to reflect the Government’s public-health-focused approach to substance use.

In addition, in May 2022, at the request of the province of British Columbia, the Minister of Mental Health and Addictions granted a time-limited exemption under the CDSA so that adults 18 years of age and older in the province will not be subject to criminal charges for personal possession of small amounts of certain illegal drugs. Instead, where appropriate, individuals may be provided with information regarding local health and social services. This time-limited exemption will be supported by rigorous monitoring and a third-party evaluation to gather evidence and data on its impacts and outcomes. The results will help inform Canada’s comprehensive approach to addressing substance use harms.

The Government of Canada is supporting policies and approaches for greater access to pharmaceutical-grade alternatives to the toxic illegal drug supply. As of December 2022, Health Canada has supported 28 safer supply pilot projects across Canada through the Substance Use and Addictions Program, representing total funding of over $77.8 million. This includes supporting a range of service delivery projects in British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick, research/knowledge transfer and exchange projects, and a National Safer Supply Community of Practice to help share knowledge amongst stakeholders. 

We are also building the evidence around safer supply, including:

  • supporting a preliminary qualitative assessment of 10 safer supply projects, conducted by an independent contractor; and,
  • funding an arms-length evaluation of 11 safer supply pilot projects funded through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and carried out by the Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse.

The Government engages with people with lived and living experience (PWLLE) and organizations that represent them, including: regular bi-lateral meetings with key organizations, participation on projects teams, facilitating PWLLE engagement in government and ministerial events and meaningful consultations in order to better understand their perspectives of substance use and on-the-ground realities (e.g., roundtables, Knowledge Exchange Series, etc.). Recently, Health Canada has established the PWLLE Council, the Expert Advisory Group on Safer Supply and the Expert Task Force on Substance Use as part of this engagement strategy.

We have established federal, provincial and territorial governance tables, including the Special Advisory Committee on the Epidemic of Opioid Overdoses, the Federal/Provincial/Territorial Committee on Substance Use (formerly Problematic Substance Use & Harms), and the Federal/Provincial/Territorial Assistant Deputy Minister Committee on Mental Health and Substance Use to facilitate ongoing collaboration and consultation with provincial and territorial partners.

Our Government also made a number of regulatory changes at the federal level to help improve access to drug treatment and safer supply programs, including:

  • issuing a class exemption (an exemption for a group of individuals, such as pharmacists, to authorize specific activities with controlled substances) to make it easier for patients to access the medications they need;
  • approving injectable hydromorphone as a treatment option for patients with severe opioid use disorder;
  • approving diacetylmorphine as a new treatment option for patients with severe opioid use disorder, as well as facilitating the prescribing and dispensing of methadone and diacetylmorphine; and,  
  • authorizing nurses who provide health care services at a community health facility to conduct certain activities with controlled substances.

Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada have been working with provinces, territories, municipalities, Indigenous communities and other partners, including researchers, advocates and people with lived and living experience, so that people who use drugs can continue to access the treatment, harm reduction and other services they need.

Health Canada has supported the rapid expansion of supervised consumption services across Canada. Since January 2016, the number of federally approved supervised consumption sites offering services grew from 1 to 39. Health Canada also proactively issued exemptions that allows provinces and territories to establish new temporary Urgent Public Health Need Sites – also known as overdose prevention sites – within existing supervised consumption sites, shelters or other temporary sites, as needed. Urgent Public Health Need Sites, unlike supervised consumption sites, are temporary locations that can be set up rapidly to address the overdose crisis. Both share the goal of reducing overdose deaths.

Since 2017, guided by the CDSS, the Government of Canada has committed more than $815 million to address the toxic drug and overdose crisis and responded quickly to implement a wide range of measures to help save lives and meet the diverse needs of people who use drugs. A significant part of the federal investments to address the overdose crisis have focused on increasing access to urgently needed treatment and life-saving services, including harm reduction. For example:

  • $150 million through Budget 2018 to an Emergency Treatment Fund for provinces and territories to implement multi-year projects that improve access to evidence-based treatment services to help address the overdose crisis (cost-matched by provinces and territories for a total investment of over $300 million).
  • Nearly $350 million for the Substance Use and Addictions Program through Budgets 2017-2022 to provide funding to other levels of government, community-led and not-for-profit organizations in Canada to support projects aimed at prevention, harm reduction, and treatment.

Federal investments have also been targeted towards awareness, prevention and stigma reduction activities to address the overdose crisis. Over $22.8M has been invested in public education activities, including:

  • Know More” opioids awareness program, which aims to engage teens and young adults on the facts surrounding opioids, ways to reduce risks and the harms of stigma;
  • National advertising campaigns to reduce stigma around opioids and substance use, and raise awareness of the Good Samaritan law; and,
  • Ease the Burden” public education campaign to reduce substance use stigma surrounding help-seeking and encourage people to get help, especially for men in physically demanding jobs, who have been highly impacted by the opioid overdose crisis (since 2016, three out of four opioid-related deaths are men, and 30% to 50% of those employed worked in trades at the time of their death).

Health Canada continues to advance work to strengthen the CDSS informed by engagement and input from key stakeholders, including an Expert Task Force on Substance Use and provinces and territories, as well as evidence-based actions.

The Government of Canada is committed to continued collaboration between jurisdictions, health providers, people with lived and living experience, stakeholders and partners, such as community-based organizations, to reduce the harms associated with substance use and providing people with the culturally appropriate and trauma-informed support they need.

Response by the Minister of Public Safety

Signed by (Minister or Parliamentary Secretary): PAM DAMOFF, M.P.

The Government continues to deliver on its promise to work toward removing the stigma associated with convictions for simple possession of drugs.

Originally introduced in Parliament on December 7, 2021, Bill C-5, an Act to amend the Criminal Code and the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA), was amended in September to address concerns about the ongoing stigma associated with a record of convictions for simple possession of drugs. It now specifies that past and future convictions for possession of controlled drugs must be kept separate and apart from other criminal convictions after a certain period of time. This amendment is consistent with the underlying objective of the Bill to address the negative consequences associated with simple possession. The amendment acknowledges the calls from public health organizations and those who work with individuals with addictions. It helps address barriers to successful reintegration into society and also helps address a contributing cause of the ongoing opioid crisis, namely the stigmatization of people who use drugs.

Criminal records have a lasting impact on the ability of rehabilitated individuals to successfully reintegrate into society after overcoming personal challenges in their lives. Treating simple possession of drugs as a health and social issue means eliminating the stigma associated with convictions for simple possession.

Response by the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada

Signed by (Minister or Parliamentary Secretary): The Parliamentary Secretary Gary Anandasangaree

1.    Bill C-5, An Act to Amend the Criminal Code and Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, received Royal Assent and came into force on November 17, 2022. The Bill aims to ensure that responses to criminal offences are fair and effective, while ensuring that public safety is maintained. The amendments to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) reinforce the Government’s commitment to address the ongoing opioid crisis by providing space to treat substance use as a health issue, rather than as a criminal one. The  law now requires police and prosecutors to consider options  such as issuing a warning, or divert people to treatment programs or other supportive services instead of proceeding with charges for simple drug possession, and enacts for the first time in the CDSA a declaration of principles to guide them in exercising discretion.  

2.    Bill C-5 further addresses the stigma associated with having a criminal record by: (1) limiting the kind of information that may be kept in the police record of warning or referrals and the use that can be made of such records, as well as to whom these records may be disclosed; and, (2) providing that past and future records of convictions for this offence be kept separate and apart from other records of convictions after a certain period of time. 

3.    The 2018 Expungement of Historically Unjust Convictions Act provides that the Governor in Council may list an offence as eligible for expungement if the activity no longer constitutes an offence, and the criminalization of the activity was a historical injustice. Bill C-5 did not repeal the offence of simple drug possession.

Presented to the House of Commons
Gord Johns (Courtenay—Alberni)
December 5, 2022 (Petition No. 441-00924)
Government response tabled
January 30, 2023
Photo - Gord Johns
Courtenay—Alberni
New Democratic Party Caucus
British Columbia

Only validated signatures are counted towards the total number of signatures.