
The Decibel Drug decriminalization is over in B.C. What’s next?
18 snips
Jan 29, 2026 Andrea Woo, Globe and Mail health and drug policy reporter, offers a concise retrospective on B.C.’s decriminalization pilot. She outlines what the pilot aimed to fix and how it was framed. She discusses reported outcomes, policing and public disorder impacts, Indigenous leaders’ concerns about consultation, and what legal and program changes follow the program’s end.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Decriminalization Was Oversold
- Decriminalization was framed to reduce stigma and steer people toward health services rather than prisons.
- Andrea Wu says that framing likely oversold what decriminalization alone could achieve.
Mixed Health Outcomes During Pilot
- Health metrics showed mixed signals: more use of overdose prevention services but slight declines in opioid agonist treatment.
- The province will consolidate data and issue a final report to clarify impacts.
Police Tools And Legal Authority Disputed
- Police said decriminalization limited their lawful grounds to approach people using drugs in public.
- Criminal lawyer Kyla Lee challenged that, saying police still had tools like municipal bylaws and other offenses.
