Yukon supervised drug consumption site upgraded to allow indoor smoking
WHITEHORSE — People who use illicit drugs may now smoke their substances at the supervised drug consumption site in Whitehorse, one of the first in Canada to allow inhalation indoors, the Yukon government announced Monday.
A new room with an upgraded ventilation system has been added to the facility, the only one in Yukon, which opened last fall to provide services such as drug testing and access to the overdose-reversing medication naloxone.
Bronte Renwick-Shields, executive director of Blood Ties Four Directions Centre, which operates the Whitehorse facility, said allowing people to inhale their substances was always part of the plan but acquiring equipment and completing the upgrades had been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Inhalation is the most common method of consumption for substances like crack cocaine, fentanyl and methamphetamine in the territory, she said, and it’s important that harm reduction services reflect the community’s needs.

