Quote:
Originally Posted by TitleRequired
It would be based largely on the Portuguese model. Portugal’s approach to addiction is known largely for how the country decriminalized all personal-use possession of drugs starting in 2001.
Less known is how Portugal paired this with a strict system of compelled treatment. Anybody caught with drugs is referred to a Commission for the Dissuasion of Drug Addiction, where a panel of health professionals recommends treatment – and can levy fines and other civil consequences in cases of non-cooperation. ref: https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/involuntary-drug-treatment-alberta-2023-election
Works in Portugal.
We barely know what this looks like in AB, and obviously NB hasn't released their plan. All I know is we don't need a Needle Park (Zurich) or DTES locally. We don't need to be that cool to have our own skid row.
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The Portuguese plan has great results, but I don't buy for a second that a government run by Higgs and Austin are capable of executing a plan with that type of care and dignity. In fact many aspects of this plan involve the harm reduction that is being talked about as the issue on this very forum.
A plan with the amount of care and professionals needed will need a massive investment that would make Higgs head spin. The plan in Portugal truly treated addiction as a health care issue. The language on this forum and by others does not indicate any willingness to talk about it in that way. The plan in Portugal had a buy in from the professionals involved in the process while the PC's decided to start looking at this legislation without involving any of the key stakeholders - a pattern for this government.
A few examples of some of the things you see in the Portugal. (NPR article)
"Every day, a government van pulls up and gives him a dose of methadone, an opioid that helps wean people off of heroin. It's a step toward harm-reduction. He still does cocaine, but no longer shoots up."
"Drug workers hand out packets with clean needles and condoms and listen to another addict, Antonio, describe his anxiety."
"For every person in Portugal who cannot escape addiction, there's daily methadone, counseling and free treatment. A generation ago, these addicts were put in jail. Now they're on the street."
The Portugal plan works because it comes with an entire team of resources paired with harm reduction efforts that are heavily criticized by conservatives at provincial and federal levels.
Another element involved in the plan is decriminalizing drugs, something again that conservatives are against.