In Montreal, services for the vulnerable trigger backlash, but no easy solutions
MONTREAL — Officials in Montreal are struggling to get the public on board with the city’s approach to treating people with severe addiction and homelessness, as those social crises become fodder for political attacks.
In Montreal’s St-Henri neighbourhood, a supervised consumption site that also provides transitional housing for homeless people with addiction or mental health issues has nearby residents fuming because it’s located near an elementary school. A few kilometres away, in downtown Montreal, another supervised drug use site has helped turn part of the district into what has become known as “crack alley.”
The city is feeling the heat from residents, and in response will hold public consultations on how to integrate services for vulnerable people within urban areas. Montreal’s mayor is also getting criticized by federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, who held a news conference outside St-Henri’s Maison Benoît Labre on July 12, saying the mayor is forcing children to go to school near a “drug den.”
But there are no easy solutions, according to experts, who say people with severe drug addiction need services like supervised consumption sites — where they can be treated if they overdose — or else they risk dying on the streets.