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Published March 31, 2025

(Updated) Nine Ontario supervised consumption sites to close despite injunction, minister says

By  Liam Casey
CP - supervised consumption sites
Supporters and harm reduction workers protest outside of the Ontario legislature in Toronto on Monday, October 21, 2024, as groups gather to protest against the Ontario government's proposal to close consumption treatment sites.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

Updated March 31, 2025 @ 2:50pm

Nine Ontario supervised consumption sites will close Tuesday as planned, the provincial government said Monday, despite a recent court injunction allowing them to remain open temporarily.

The Ontario Superior Court of Justice granted the injunction Friday while a judge reviews a constitutional challenge of a provincial law that bans sites from operating within 200 metres of schools or daycares. The law takes effect on Tuesday. 

Only one out of 10 sites slated for closure is poised to stay open. Nine agreed to become new homelessness and addiction recovery treatment hubs, or HART hubs as the province calls them. 

They will receive about four times as much money as they did under a previous funding model — but they will not be allowed to offer supervised drug consumption services.

"The nine transitioning HART hubs are opening April 1 as planned, ensuring the continuity of mental health support services when drug injection sites close on March 31," said Hannah Jensen, a spokeswoman for Health Minister Sylvia Jones.

"All nine hubs have received startup funding and the ministry will continue to work with them to finalize their operational budgets by mid-April."

Late Friday, Justice John Callaghan said all sites that were slated for imminent closure could remain open until 30 days after he decides the case, finding that the potential harm to drug users should the sites close outweighed the risk of public disorder nearby.

Shortly after the decision, Jones's officetold The Canadian Press the province would move forward with an abstinence-based treatment model as part of the new law, which also bans the distribution and collection of needles and other drug paraphernalia.

The Neighbourhood Group and two people who use its consumption site, the Kensington Market Overdose Prevention Site, had taken the province to court last December, alleging the law violates both the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Constitution.

They argued in court last week thatthe law violates the right to life, liberty and security of the person.

The Kensington Market site, which will remain open, does not receive provincial funding and will not transition into a HART Hub — so it is not handcuffed like the other sites, said CEO Bill Sinclair.

"More than 21,000 overdoses have been reversed in the last five years at all these sites, and collectively across the province, many lives are saved and people are walking around now because our doors were open," Sinclair said.

"So we're glad to be able to continue to provide life-saving services." 

One of two sites run by the Parkdale Queen West Community Health Sites will also close for good on Monday night, despite the organization celebrating the court injunction last week.

The Queen West consumption site will have to shutter its doors Monday, said the site's executive director, Angela Robertson. 

Taking advantage of the court injunction would mean losing the money the site is set to receive for the HART hub conversion, she said. 

A federal exemption allowing the site to provide supervised consumption expires Monday, she added, and it can't be extended without funding being secured.

Robertson said the site's clients are being told to move to a sister site in the Parkdale neighbourhood that will continue to operate because it is not within 200 metres of a school or daycare and therefore doesn't fall under the new legislation.

It was a difficult weekend for users of the site, she said.

"It's hard because the clients heard the news of an injunction and clients came to the service this weekend believing that we have 30 more days to remain open," Robertson said. 

"That's how clients heard the news and we've had to dash their hopes."

The province is investing $550 million to fund a total of 28 HART hubs across Ontario, along with 540 new, highly supportive housing units.

One of those HART hubs will be located in Barrie.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 31, 2025.

Files - Barrie 360

This is a corrected story. An earlier version incorrectly stated the amount of funding and number of new hubs planned by the province.

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