B.C. ending take-home safer supply of opioids to stop criminal diversion
VICTORIA — British Columbia Health Minister Josie Osborne has announced a major revamp of its safer-supply anti-addiction program, converting it to a “witnessed-only” model in which users are watched as they consume opioids they have been prescribed.
It was a “significant” change to end the take-home model and it would be difficult for some, but the move was designed to reduce criminal diversion of prescribed alternatives to illicit street drugs, Osborne said on Wednesday.
Critics of B.C.’s safer-supply program have long complained that diversion of prescribed opioids such as hydromorphone was being downplayed by the government, and Opposition B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad pounced on the issue in the legislature’s first question period in nine months.
He said Premier David Eby had been “gaslighting” British Columbians about the impact of the safer-supply program, which Conservative public safety critic Elenore Sturko said had led to “publicly funded drug trafficking.”


