Thank you for the question.
I'll be honest. I'm disappointed in the national dialogue around language like “harm reduction” and “safe supply”. It's unfortunate that they've effectively become marketing terms meant to convince Canadians of something that they intuitively know doesn't work, when it comes to safe supply, for example.
I don't care about the label anymore. If you have a policy, internationally or anywhere, that wants to get people healthy, then I will adopt that within my program. We have the narcotic transition services, as you mentioned, MP Goodridge. We have the drug consumption sites. We have the digital overdose response app.
We have the virtual opioid dependency program, which provides the world's first and most innovative immediate same-day access to evidence-based opioid therapy for buprenorphine products like Suboxone and Sublocade and products like methadone. Every day 8,000 Albertans get access to that. We have mass distribution of naloxone kits. Some people call all of that harm reduction and some people don't. That's fine.
However, if you call harm reduction mass distributing high-powered pharmaceutical-grade opioids unwitnessed into our communities, when those are diverted and end up on Alberta's high school and college campuses, furthering addiction, starting new addiction and massively introducing thousands of new people into addiction, then I no longer think it's fair to let Canadians believe that's harm reduction. It's clear that's harm production. It's clear that, if you're distributing the drugs, if you're the one purveying them into the community en masse, then that will produce more harm. That is my issue with it.
I am not being idealistic as I come at this beyond wanting to help individuals heal and recover. My big concern is that it's being torqued way out of context for political purposes. I'm not going to allow the marketing terms and the branding to get in the way of actually helping thousands of Albertans who are struggling.
Alberta is defiantly against and will continue to make illegal safe supply for obvious reasons. Applying addictive drugs into a community struggling with addiction will not help the addiction crisis, but I will get them help and meet them where they are. I will meet them and bring them to a spot where they can have an opportunity to recover.