the b.c. government has, in the past, declined to publicly disclose the costs of administering safer supply, but if those 4,500 patients were incurring up to $11,000 a year in dispensing fees, it would mean that taxpayers could be paying upwards of $50 million a year in pharmacy fees alone, before even factoring in inventory costs, to flood their own communities with dangerous opioids.
as stated in the leaked presentation, the province will move forward by targeting specific pharmacies and prosecuting bad actors, which is helpful, but insufficient.
the bureaucrats and politicians currently tasked with fixing this problem spent two years insisting that reports of widespread safer supply diversion were
disinformation and fear-mongering. they held
press conferences pushing this falsehood, repeatedly
smeared critics and either purposefully misled the public or displayed a wilful blindness towards this issue. one wonders how long it would have taken for canadians to learn of the special investigation unit’s findings had they not been leaked.
with public trust now broken, an independent public inquiry is in order. no more gaslighting, obfuscating or secret proceedings. the time for truth is now.