Pubdate: Tue, 28 Apr 2009
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2009 The Globe and Mail Company
Contact: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/feedback/?form=lettersToTheEditorForm
Website: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Wendy Dueck
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites)
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/insite

LAWYERS GIRD FOR LEGAL BATTLE OVER INSITE

Ottawa Shouldn't Make It Easier For Drug Users To Break The Law, 
Federal Official Tells Court

VANCOUVER -- Vancouver's Insite clinic has become the focus of a 
constitutional showdown in British Columbia's highest court, where a 
federal lawyer yesterday argued the government is under no obligation 
to make it easier for citizens to break the law by condoning a 
supervised injection site.

"It should be stressful to break the law," Department of Justice 
lawyer Robert Frater said yesterday in the B.C. Court of Appeal. "The 
government is under no obligation to provide [its citizens] with a 
safer way of breaking the law."

Making drug-related laws unconstitutional because they are difficult 
for drug addicts to obey would be "capitulation" along the lines of 
changing arson laws to accommodate pyromaniacs, Mr. Frater added.

That argument mischaracterizes positions taken by Insite supporters, 
and by the B.C. Supreme Court judge who last year ruled some sections 
of Canada's Controlled Drugs and Substances Act were unconstitutional 
because they deprived addicts of access to Insite services, Insite 
lawyer Joseph Arvay responded.

"Where the law stands between ill people and the health care they 
need, that law deprives those people of their rights to life and 
security of person," said Mr. Arvay, who is representing PHS 
Community Services in the case.

Without Insite, addicts will inject in back alleys and flophouses, 
putting themselves at risk of death and disease and potentially 
passing on infections to others, he added.

The Appeal Court hearing, scheduled for three days this week, is the 
latest skirmish in a long-running battle over Insite, a Downtown 
Eastside facility that opened its doors in 2003 and has since been 
the site of more than one million drug injections.

The clinic, to which users bring their own drugs, opened as part of a 
plan to tackle an epidemic of HIV-AIDs and drug-overdose deaths in 
the Downtown Eastside.

To operate the facility, the Vancouver Coastal Health authority 
applied for exemptions under the CDSA that would allow users to 
inject drugs at the clinic, and staff to monitor that activity, 
without staff or patients running afoul of federal drug laws.

The initial exemptions were granted for three years beginning in 
September of 2003 and extended first to the end of 2007 and 
subsequently to June 30, 2008.

With the clock running down on Insite's exemption, PHS Community 
Services Society (which operates the clinic under contract to VCH) 
and two individuals last year launched a court action in a bid to 
keep the clinic operating on constitutional grounds.

In a landmark ruling last May, Mr. Justice Ian Pitfield of the 
Supreme Court found sections of the CDSA that relate to possession 
and trafficking are inconsistent with Section 7 of the Canadian 
Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

"The blanket prohibition contributes to the very harm it seeks to 
prevent," Judge Pitfield wrote in his reasons for judgment. "It is 
inconsistent with the state's interest in fostering individual and 
community health and preventing death and disease."

In the ruling, the federal government was given until June 30 of this 
year to redraft the provisions of the CDSA against possession and 
trafficking to accommodate Insite's operation. In the interim, users 
and staff were granted a constitutional exemption that allowed the 
clinic to operate.

On June 3 last summer, the federal government filed its notices of 
appeal relating to Judge Pitfield's decision.

This week's Appeal Court hearing is expected to feature 
constitutional debate and federal-provincial jousting over 
jurisdiction over community health services.

With a report from Justine Hunter in Victoria
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom