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Oregon voters OK drug decriminalization. Why not here?

Oregon’s overwhelming vote to decriminalize some drugs for personal use on Tuesday has experts and advocates in British Columbia wondering what it will take for the province to move in the same direction.
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In yesterday’s election, Oregon voters decisively supported changes to decriminalize illicit drugs and move to allow the therapeutic use of psilocybin. Photo via the European Pressphoto Agency.

Oregon’s overwhelming vote to decriminalize some drugs for personal use on Tuesday has experts and advocates in British Columbia wondering  what it will take for the province to move in the same direction.

As the United States  presidential and senate races teetered on the outcome of mail and  absentee ballots, Oregon decisively supported changes to decriminalize  illicit drugs and move to allow the therapeutic use of psilocybin.

About one in 11 people in the state use illicit substances, but it ranks last in access to treatment and recovery in the U.S.

More than 58.8 per cent of reported ballots in the state voted “yes” for citizen-led Measure 110.  It means those stopped by law enforcement with less than two grams of  substances like heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine won’t face arrest or  jail time.

Instead, the measure  suggests a US$100 non-criminal ticket and access to expanded treatment  and recovery programs to be funded through sales tax from cannabis  sales. Oregon was the first U.S. state to legalize and regulate cannabis  in 2014, four years before Canada followed suit.

The $100 penalty could be  waived if the person agrees to a health assessment by a substance use  health-care provider. Drug trafficking and sales would remain illegal.

“What we’re really trying to do is move  substance use out of a criminal justice model and into a health-care  model where it belongs,” Haven Wheelock, one of the lead campaigners for  the change, told the Appeal news website in September. 

Experts in substance use and public health,  including B.C.’s top doctor Dr. Bonnie Henry and her federal  counterpart Dr. Theresa Tam, agree on a public health approach to drug  use and have advocated for decriminalization as a means of curbing  skyrocketing overdose fatalities.

But political leaders in B.C. and across  Canada have refused to make moves towards decriminalization despite  repeated calls and overwhelming evidence that it would help save lives  and connect people with essential health care.

“If our intent is really to help people, we  want to engage with them, and having drugs criminalized just isolates  people and makes support further difficult,” said Mark Tyndall, an  expert in substance use at the University of British Columbia School of  Population and Public Health.

Henry wrote a report in early 2019 calling on B.C. to decriminalize drug use by using powers  available to the provincial government. But Premier John Horgan  rejected its recommendations and said it was a federal responsibility.

This summer, Horgan wrote Ottawa asking the  government to amend the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act to allow  for decriminalization. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has rejected the  approach.

Tyndall says Oregon’s move is flawed, but  an important milestone that could catalyze a broader conversation about  decriminalization in B.C. and elsewhere.

“It’s just such a positive thing that they  even brought it forward and it even passed,” Tyndall said. “People need  to celebrate the fact that decriminalization comes into the discussion.”

Meghan McDermott, a senior staff lawyer at  the BC Civil Liberties Association, and Tyndall share concerns with  Oregon’s version of decriminalization.

McDermott, who wrote to the province to urge decriminalization in August, said Oregon has  adopted a coercive measure and makes police the gatekeepers who decide  who gets support and who does not.

They did decide whether police can have the $100 fine waived, she said.

“The police act as a  gateway to the services, so you’re incentivized to access services you  might not even need as a way to escape a civil punishment like a fine,”  she said. Not everyone who uses substances wants or needs treatment, she  added.

Even when people do want treatment, there  are often long waits in B.C. for publicly-funded options, and private  programs are unaffordable for many.

Tyndall noted some people who use drugs  also might not be able to jump through the hoops necessary to have their  tickets dropped.

“It’s still really punitive and doesn’t  really translate well to the real world,” said Tyndall. “If they  implemented that in Vancouver today, there would still be a lot of  people walking around with unpaid tickets in their pocket.”

The limits on possessing drugs — between  one and two grams, depending on the substance — is also unreasonable  given that many people buy drugs in bulk if they can, he said.

Despite its flaws, McDermott is heartened  to see a grassroots campaign lead to political action and “cracks in the  facade of the war on drugs” in both the U.S. and Canada.

“The way people are incarcerated for drug  use, it devastates families and individuals and costs the state money,  and it pathologizes and isolates people,” she said.

Both Tyndall and McDermott hope the imperfect measure can build momentum for decriminalization in B.C.

“Hopefully it is going to set the stage for  a lot of bigger and more courageous action,” said McDermott. “But it’s  only called courageous because it seems to be such a politically fraught  issue.”

“I think it speaks a lot that if they can do it in Oregon, certainly we can do it here,” added Tyndall.