Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 1, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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A7
NEWS I LOCAL
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2025
I
T was an exercise in frustration.
Point Douglas residents say the latest consul-
tation meeting about the supervised drug site
that’s proposed for their neighbourhood, failed to
address key questions.
The Free Press spoke with attendees who favour
and oppose the proposed location at 200 Disraeli
Fwy., who said questions posed Thursday night
about how the community would be kept safe
were either re-directed or not fully answered.
“We didn’t walk away with any questions an-
swered… There was nothing to do with what they
(are) going to do if the crime rate skyrockets.
They just didn’t address it at all, they just shut it
down,” said Audrey Kohinsky, one of the 150-plus
people who attended the meeting.
“As soon as someone would ask about it, they’d
say, ‘Nope, we’re here to talk about the project
and what we’re going to do and what we’re putting
into place,’” she said Friday.
Because so many of the questions were about
safety, one attendee said the meeting eventually
felt “performative.”
“I just don’t know what they expected to hap-
pen,” she said. “Of course, all of the community
members were going to come with concerns and
be upset and then to be given almost an automated
message every time back (saying), ‘We can’t talk
about that.’”
Members of the media were barred from the
meeting, which was described as an opportuni-
ty to “ask questions and provide feedback to the
consultation team and the minister of housing, ad-
dictions and homelessness Bernadette Smith” in a
letter sent out to residents.
On Friday, Smith said questions posed by at-
tendees were heard and safety measures, includ-
ing an increased police presence and teams of
Downtown Community Safety Partnership mem-
bers, were discussed.
“We were really letting them know that the
police are there to enforce, we’re coming from a
harm reduction approach, we’re bringing people
to treatment so that we can keep them alive,” she
said.
Manitoba has applied to Health Canada to op-
erate the supervised drug site, which is set to be
managed by the Aboriginal Health and Wellness
Centre of Winnipeg. The federal website says the
application remains under review “awaiting key
information.”
Smith said some attendees to Thursday’s meet-
ing had suggested other locations for the site and
that would be taken into account.
“If this structure that we’re proposing isn’t
strong enough, what more measures can be put
in. And if this isn’t the right location, then let us
know,” she said.
A police representative who was present Thurs-
day has offered to hold a safety-focused town hall,
said Smith, who is the area’s MLA. She said she
would attend it.
David Vrel, a Point Douglas resident, said the
promise rings hollow.
He said the area doesn’t have enough police
presence for the high level of crime, so blanket
promises for increased security around the site
don’t amount to an adequate plan, as far as he is
concerned.
“You’re pretty much saying that we’re going to
be secure on this magical police force who is al-
ready overworked and strained… it just feels like
they really don’t care about us,” he said.
Stephanie Casar, a council member of Our Lady
of Lourdes parish on MacDonald Ave., didn’t ask
questions at the meeting but said some in atten-
dance were visibly frustrated by the end of the
90-minute meeting.
“I don’t know if the minister was prepared to
address questions outside of a script and I think
maybe that’s where people were getting a little
frustrated,” she said. “The other people on the
panel seemed a bit more willing to go down these
roads, but I would say, safety, it wasn’t addressed
head on.”
Casar said people on both sides of the issue
were vocal about needing more details before
getting on board.
“I think if they want to move this forward…
then work with us and engage us in the process
of how you will help us, make us feel safe. Then
we will be more inclined to be on board with what
you’re trying to put together.”
Manitoba recorded 400 suspected overdoses or
drug poisonings from Jan. 1, 2024 to Aug. 31, 2024,
as per the most recent preliminary data provided
by the chief medical examiner. There were a re-
cord 467 deaths in 2022 and 445 deaths in 2023.
malak.abas@freepress.mb.ca
MALAK ABAS
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
Point Douglas residents say the latest public consulta-
tion meeting about the proposed supervised drug site
at 200 Disraeli St. failed to address key questions.
Point Douglas supervised drug site
meeting panned by attendees
Minister accused of shutting down
questions about safety
;