Skip to content
Capilano Courier
Menu
  • Home
  • Sections
    • News
    • Features & The Profile
    • Arts & Culture
    • Letters
    • Humour
    • Video Production
  • About
    • Advertise
    • Contribute
  • Meet the Crew
  • Online Issues
  • Events
  • EIC Election
Menu

Fighting Fentanyl

Posted on February 19, 2018February 20, 2018 by Nima Boscarino

Life of the Party feat. Narcan workshop brings important message about drug use to students

Jackson Snetsinger // Contributor

The fentanyl epidemic that is currently sweeping the streets and drug scenes of Vancouver has created a crisis not felt by the city since the AIDS crisis of the 1980s. Fentanyl is becoming more prevalent – it’s getting cut into more drugs and its death count is rapidly rising. Approximately 1,420 individuals overdosed in Vancouver in 2017 alone, compared to the 922 people who overdosed the previous year.

The epidemic has reached the point where civil service workers can no longer keep up with the increasing numbers of overdoses. Much like the AIDS epidemic, these workers can’t control what people do in the privacy of their own homes. To counter the fentanyl epidemic, addicts are being encouraged to practice harm reduction, which allows drug users to engage in safe drug use.

Strategies taught in harm reduction courses include how to recognize an overdose, how to prevent it and how to be safe while using.

Insite and the Portland Hotel Society are strong leaders in the fight against fentanyl use and the problems of overdosing in Vancouver. Outside of their work in areas like the downtown Eastside, the Portland Hotel Society also works with university students to further educate the public on the effects of drug use and harm reduction skills. “We don’t want people doing drugs, but if they are doing it they might as well be educated and test them” said Perry Safari, the Capilano Students’ Union (CSU) president and vice-president finance and services.

The CSU and Stacey Forrester of the Portland Hotel Society presented a work shop called Life of the Party feat. Narcan on Jan. 30, educating students about safe drug use strategies and valuable approaches to harm reduction. Training done by Life of the Party feat. Narcan is part of Capilano University’s Adulting Series. The program’s goal is to inform students about things in life that classes don’t cover, including tenant rights, self-defence, and necessities like health and dental plans. “We hold monthly workshops, and we want to repeat them to make sure [information] is not forgotten,” said Sarah Carrier, CSU services coordinator.

To some, encouraging harm reduction may seem like it’s promoting drug use, when in actuality it prevents it.

In 2001, Portugal decriminalised possession of all drugs, and since then new drug user rates have dropped by 10 per cent and overdose rates by 15 per cent. Canada isn’t decriminalizing the use of recreational drugs, but with the help of harm reduction strategies and properly educating adolescents, drug use rates have a greater potential of dropping. “We haven’t really talked about policies at the CSU,” said Safari. “We have had good feedback on the series, so we want to make it annual thing. However, the University doesn’t have any plans for harm reduction.”

Drug use is often a silent problem, and one that many people don’t admit to. There are options for students battling addiction that they’re not often familiar with, such as visiting Insite where they will be taught how to safely and properly administer drugs and also test for fentanyl.

Insite certainly isn’t for everyone, however. For more information, students are encouraged to log on to Phs.ca and learn how to practice harm reduction strategies, as well as gain background knowledge about the Portland Hotel Society. Students who use drugs often or recreationally are strongly encouraged to learn more about harm reduction and safe drug use practices.

Category: Campus Life

Post navigation

← Uncapped Rail Jam lays tracks at CapU for the sixth time
Opinions: Penticton school forces student to cover self-harm scars or face expulsion →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Upcoming Tabling Hours: Thursdays, 12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m., at either the Learning Commons entrance (LB 126) or Birch Cafeteria.

Latest News

  • CSU President and VP Finance Removed from Office Due to Alleged Misconduct
    “Improper use” of in camera proceedings led to two executives being removed five days later Laura Morales Padilla (she/her) // EIC In the […]
  • Meet CapU’s New President
    An interview with Dr. Jason Dewling Ben Taylor // Crew Writer (he/him)  Capilano Courier: Questions for President March 11, 2026   […]
  • Yuri Fulmer Pt. 2
    Students reactions to the political aspirations of CapU’s chancellor Ben Taylor // Crew Writer (he/him) Andrei Gueco (he/him) // […]
  • Summer Intensives at CapU Squamish
    The university launches new summer programming with a focus on land and sustainability  Ren Zhang (they/them) // Contributor Anna […]
  • CapU lost 81 full-time-equivalent faculty—with more losses to come
    Letter from Michael Begg, president of the Capilano University Faculty Association (CFA) Note: Michael Begg sent the following letter to […]
  • CapU’s Chancellor Yuri Fulmer is Running to Be Leader of the BC Conservatives
    Who is Yuri Fulmer, what does the Chancellor do, and why his political aspirations are relevant to every CapU student  Authors: Elliott J […]
Video Production
What’s it actually like to make a movie on acid?

Ben reacts to a short film he made while tripping — complete with a probe lens, a dentist storyline, and a very questionable creative process.
Trip to the Dentist
Subscribe
What even is a Zine? Mia shows us a behind the scene of how this little publication comes together, the vision behind it, and how to become a paid contributor of the C.C. Crumb!
Indigenous power means something different to every student, but it always begins with voice, community, and truth. Hear what CapU students had to say.
What does campus clean-up day look like?
© 2026 Capilano Courier | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme