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Cities in Australia and New Zealand get the little things right. Why can’t ours?
(www.theglobeandmail.com)
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I don't know if Australia is facing the opioid crisis the same way Canada is, but if these public washrooms are going to be accessible to the public, the government needs to take drug addiction seriously and properly address it with the money and laws that it deserves.
I recently moved back to Edmonton briefly before coming back to Calgary, and where I remember public washrooms being accessible, they were all closed off, or too monitored to make me comfortable. Washrooms that used to be public in bus terminals and downtown pedways were always conveniently "out of service", and the open ones I did come across offered by the city had two security guards sitting directly outside them.
People wash their clothes in these washrooms, inject and snort drugs, and sleep in these washrooms. Here in Calgary the Exeloos are a running jokes because they cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, and they're never available because they don't want people dealing with addictions abusing them.
It is an issue. State governments have been setting up places for drug users to take in a safe environment with clean equipment and available medical personnel. In my experience they are effective in reducing the community burden of drug addiction but they're hard to get built because a place for drug addiction is a hard sell to any one