Hay River, N.W.T., looks for ways to tackle deadly opioid crisis - Action News
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Hay River, N.W.T., looks for ways to tackle deadly opioid crisis

Residents of Hay River, N.W.T., are answering fear with action in learning to manage the town's drug crisis.Last week, residents learned that six people in the town of 3,200 had died last year from opioid use.

'People who have been here a long time, they'll tell you the same thing Hay River has never been this bad'

An elderly man stands in a large room with large wooden posts behind him.
'As long as we ignore what's going on, then we don't have to deal with it. And sometimes, we ignore it because we don't know what to do about it,' said Roy Fabian, a Deneelder from the Kt'odeeche First Nation near Hay River, N.W.T. (Natalie Pressman/CBC)

Residents of Hay River, N.W.T., are answering fear with action in learning to manage an emerging drug crisis.

The town of about 3,200 people sits on the south shore of Great Slave Lake and is known as the "hub of the North" for its connection to southern highways and routes to transport goods further north.

In the last year, N.W.T. Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Kami Kandola has issued three public health warnings alerting residents of fentanyl and carfentanil in the territory's drug supply.

And last week, Kandolaescalated her warnings and travelled to Hay Riverto hold a news conference. She said there thatbased on preliminary evidence, five of the territory's six opioid-related deathslast year in the N.W.T. involved either fentanylor carfentanil. All six deaths were in Hay River.

She warned of the dangers of opioidsand urged anyone using drugs to not use alone,andto have at least two naloxone kits on hand in order to temporarily reverse the effects of substances, if needed.

"When you talk to people who have been here a long time, they'll tell you the same thing Hay River has never been this bad," saidMonica Piros, director of child, family and community wellness with the town's health and social services authority.

Piros saidexisting social problems, mixed with the stress of COVID-19 and the trauma of last spring's unprecedentedflood, is contributing to the town's drugcrisis.

"People use drugs because they're hurting," she said.

New support programs

As concerns over drug poisonings grow,so docommunity resources for support.

Piros and her team have begun a "Hope for Families"program, to support family members of those who use substances. The weekly program has so far held only one session.

"We had all this information lined up, ready to roll out, and what we found is that what people really needed was a safe space to grieve," Piros said. "Moving forward we have this curriculum that's been developed but we also recognize that this program needs to have an organic nature."

A woman sits at her desk in an office and looks at the camera.
'What we found is that what people really needed was a safe space to grieve,' said Monica Piros, director of child, family and community wellness with the health and social services authority in Hay River. (Natalie Pressman/CBC)

Piros's team also runs clinics at the Hay River shelter to facilitate reflection on why users turn to drugs, as well as offer programming for new and expecting mothers who struggle with addiction.

Though they've yet to form a formal partnership, Piros said she's also keen to work with a group of elders in the community who've unified to come up with solutions.

Piros told a story of Beatrice Lepine, one of the elders in the group, calling her office to say "the grandmothers want to know what these drugs look like."

"What are the symptoms of an overdose? What's in crack cocaine? What does fentanyl look like these are really practical questions," Piros said.

"If you're not immersed in those habits of using, you don't know what certain drugs smell like when they're being lit on fire."

She called the elders a"powerhouse" in the community, and said if her team is able to help them feel more informed on the crisis, that will help them support the community members.

Don't minimize the problem, says Dene elder

Roy Fabian, a Deneelder living on Hay River's neighbouring Kt'odeeche First Nation reserve, is also part of the elder's group.

He said he thinks the number is higher than the six drug-related deaths the territory's coroner has counted, and he's heard the same from others.

"For a while, they were almost on a weekly basis, sometimes one, two people were dying from addiction," he said.

"It's really scary."

At last week's news conference, N.W.T. chief coroner Garth Eggenberger acknowledged the potential discrepancy and said it could have to do with how his officedetermines cause of death.

For example, he said, someone consuming drugs might diefrom a heart attack. Community members might see that as a drug-related death, while the coroner's office would determine the cause of death to be a heart attack.

Four people sit in a row behind a table. A microphone sits on the table and a blue curtain hangs behind them.
Health officials at a news conference last week about opioid-related deaths in Hay River. (Natalie Pressman/CBC)

Fabian said it's important to not minimize the scope of the crisis in the community.

"As long as we ignore what's going on, then we don't have to deal with it. And sometimes, we ignore it because we don't know what to do about it."

He said that's where the elders come in.

"At one time in Dene culture, it was the elders that dealt with the issues," he said.

Fabian is himself a former addict, and has undergone two years of training with Poundmaker's Lodge to become a treatment counsellor and facilitator. He said the elders have the knowledge and experience to help residents, but they haven't yet determined how best to do that.

The group has held one meeting so far.Fabian said it was a kind of sharing circle where participants talked about their own healing journeys.

"I think it went the way it was supposed to go, you know, with no expectations."

He said the idea is tohelpcommunity members to take care of themselves so they don't feel the urge to use.

'Can't arrest our way out of the drug problem,' RCMP says

Const. Josh Seaward is an RCMP officer at the Hay River detachment.He said it's clear the drugs are coming to Hay River from southern parts of Canada, but from where exactly, and how much, he couldn't say.

He said the force is ramping up training on skills for drug-related investigations. That includes handling confidential informants as well as recognizing and intercepting drug transportation vehicles.

"But what's important for people to remember is that we can't arrest our way out of the drug problem," he said. "It can't just be an enforcement solution."

Seaward pointed to a recent drug trafficking arrest and cash seizure of over $133,000 as an indicationof the town's "healthy demand" for drugs.

He said as long as the demand exists, Hay River's drug problem is likely to endure regardless of enforcement efforts.

"We're at the end of the line, you call us when it's gotten to a certain point."

He said he doesn't have any information on the substances travelling to other parts of the territory, but said"I certainly know they're coming here."

Seaward said thedemand comes from a section of the population that needs help, and that the RCMP isready to support partnering social agencies however they can.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story incorrectly spelled Monica Piros's last name as Pirous. This story has also been updated to correctly name the "Hope for Families" program.
    Jan 30, 2023 4:16 PM CT