I agree with you.
We've heard from the chiefs of police, from the First Nations Health Authority, from the chief coroner of B.C. and from the chief medical health officers right across the province that we need to scale up treatment, recovery, prevention and education, and of course replace toxic street drugs with safer supply and stop criminalizing people who use substances. That's what we've heard straight up from those organizations.
Fiona Wilson, the president of the B.C. Association of Chiefs of Police, talked about the diversion of safe supply. She said that the diversion of pharmaceuticals—toxic street drugs and street drugs in general—is nominal at best. She said that hydromorphone made up a fraction of them, that it was fentanyl that was killing people and that organized crime was replicating hydromorphone and pushing it out on the street—that was a lot of the hydromorphone they were finding—along with other pharmaceuticals.
Would you agree that it's fentanyl that's killing people on the street?