Last year, a pilot program was launched in a Canadian province allowing adults to carry up to 2.5 grams of hard drugs for personal use. Soaring drug use in public spaces has raised concerns over public safety.

The Canadian province of British Columbia is reversing its policy of allowing the open use of hard drugs in public.

Premier David Eby said Friday that police will soon have the power again to enforce drug use laws in all public places, including hospitals, restaurants, parks, and beaches.

It brings to an end a much-criticized pilot program that allowed the personal use of some illegal drugs, including cocaine, methamphetamine, MDMA, heroin, morphine, and fentanyl.

The program launched in January last year, to remove the stigma associated with drug use that keeps people from seeking help, was supposed to run for three years.

  • @Paragone
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    -17 months ago

    Idiotic frame-of-reference:

    2.5g of fentanyl could kill … what, ALL of BC’s total population??

    moronic.

    You limit it to number-of-doses, if you’re doing that kind of thing:

    something like “a person can legally carry enough drugs to use for the next 4 days” or something, with drugs of different strengths having different limits.

    Same as the volume of light beer required to put a person “over the legal limit” is drastically different from the volume of alcool, right?