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Alberta’s top court dismisses challenge of ID requirement at drug-use sites

EDMONTON — Alberta’s top court has dismissed an appeal from harm reduction advocates who wanted to stop a provincial policy that requires people who want to use a supervised drug-injection site to provide their health-card number to get inside.
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Safe drug consumption sites have been recommended by the King County Heroin and Opioid Task Force. Pictured is a safe consumption site in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. Photo supplied by ARCHES in Lethbridge

EDMONTON — Alberta’s top court has dismissed an appeal from harm reduction advocates who wanted to stop a provincial policy that requires people who want to use a supervised drug-injection site to provide their health-card number to get inside.

The rule came into force Monday.

The Alberta Court of Appeal heard the emergency request on Friday after a judge denied an application earlier this month that would have immediately suspended the requirement.

The Appeal Court said in its decision that the chambers judge, Justice Paul Belzil, accepted that there is “an opioid epidemic in Alberta,” but added that the solutions are not obvious.

“Public health authorities in Alberta are struggling to respond to this epidemic, as are public health authorities in every other province or territory in Canada,” the three Appeal Court judges wrote in their decision.

“The challenged regulation is part of an overall strategy to respond to the opioid overdose epidemic within the broader framework of the health-care system.”

Moms Stop the Harm and the Lethbridge Overdose Prevention Society, the two non-profit societies that were challenging the Alberta government, argued that the requirement to provide a health-care number could increase barriers to the sites and increase the risk of overdoses.

Lawyers representing the government said the rule will help service providers guide people to recovery-focused supports and that guidelines afford discretion to operators.

The Appeal Court judges said the central issue is whether the two advocacy groups met the test for an injunction.

“The decision to grant an interlocutory injunction is a discretionary exercise, with which an appellate court must not interfere solely because it would have exercised the discretion differently,” the decision reads.

“Appellate intervention is justified only for an error of law or principle, where there are palpable and overriding errors of fact, or where the exercise of the discretion is so aberrant that no reasonable judge could have reached the decision.”

The decision also says that while the judge was satisfied the advocacy groups met the burden of establishing that irreparable harm would occur to some users of illicit drugs, he found it is “extremely challenging” to estimate how many users might possibly be deterred by the requirement.

“(Government lawyers) have confirmed that Alberta Health has directed that while requesting a personal health number is mandatory at intake, no person will be denied service if they refuse to comply,” the decision says.

“It appears the `soft practice’ of the Lethbridge Overdose Prevention Site in making `reasonable attempts’ to collect Personal Health Numbers during intake or as clients access service, and in using discretion when deciding when to broach the subject … has not resulted in any client walking away without receiving service.”