The National Anti-Drug Strategy is a collaborative effort involving the
Department of Justice, Public Safety Canada and Health Canada, and includes
three action plans: preventing illicit drug use; treating those with illicit
drug dependencies; and combating the production and distribution of illicit
drugs.
Prevention
The Prevention Action Plan focuses on preventing illicit drug use among
young people. It will provide information to those most affected
by drug use, including parents, young people, educators, law enforcement
authorities, and communities.
The Prevention Action Plan will:
- refocus existing community-based, drug-use prevention strategies, programs
and services for youth;
- provide information directly to parents, educators, and health professionals;
- develop materials for school-based awareness and prevention strategies
for elementary and secondary school students;
- discourage illicit drug use through a new, national public awareness
campaign; and
- provide financial help to communities for local projects to tackle
the growing challenge of illicit drug use among young people.
The Government of Canada has committed $30 million in new funding over
five years to support the Prevention Action Plan. This funding will
bolster existing prevention efforts.
Treatment
The Treatment Action Plan supports innovative approaches to treating and
rehabilitating those with illicit drug addiction who pose a risk to themselves
and the community.
This Plan will promote collaboration among governments and support agencies
to increase access to drug treatment services. It will:
- enhance treatment and support for First Nations and
Inuit people;
- provide treatment programs for young offenders with
drug-related problems;
- enable the RCMP to refer youth with drug-related
problems to treatment programs; and
- support research on new treatment models.
The Government of Canada has committed over $100 million in new funding
over five years to support the Treatment Action Plan. This funding
will bolster existing treatment efforts.
Enforcement
The Enforcement Action Plan bolsters law enforcement efforts to investigate
and prosecute drug crimes. It will increase law enforcement’s
capacity to combat marijuana grow operations, synthetic drug production
and distribution operations.
The Enforcement Action Plan will:
- provide funding to the RCMP so they can expand their dedicated anti-drug
teams to help locate, investigate and shut down organizations involved
in the production and distribution of illicit drugs;
- provide resources to the Public Prosecution Service of Canada to provide
legal advice to law enforcement at the investigative stage and to effectively
prosecute those involved with the production and distribution of illicit
drugs;
- increase the number of Health Canada inspectors and investigators to
ensure accurate and timely analysis of suspected illicit drugs
seized by law enforcement;
- increase the capacity of Canada Border Service Agency to inhibit the
cross-border movement of precursor chemicals and illicit drugs;
- help law enforcement stop the flow of money that organized crime makes
from the illicit drug trade;
- improve the ability of Canadian law enforcement officials to conduct
joint investigations with their United States counterparts; and
- ensure that serious penalties are in place for serious drug crimes.
The Government of Canada has committed approximately $102 million in new
funding over five years to support the Enforcement Action Plan.
Progress under the National Anti-Drug Strategy
To date, under the National Anti-Drug Strategy, the Government of Canada
has:
- launched a prevention-focused awareness campaign,
with input from the National Drug Prevention Advisory Committee,
aimed at discouraging illicit drug use;
- announced more than $7 million in funding for Health
Canada’s Community Initiatives Fund to help communities across
Canada tackle the increasing challenge of illicit drug use by young
people;
- announced $3.3 million in new funding to enhance
the ability of Canada Border Services Agency to inhibit the cross-border
flow of illicit drugs;
- announced over $220,000 in funding for a drug treatment
intervention program for Aboriginal youth with drug and gang involvement;
- invested $10 million in funding for a Drug Prevention
Strategy for Canada’s Youth to be developed and implemented
by the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse;
- invested $8.9 million to strengthen the RCMP’s
drug enforcement and Proceeds of Crime Teams;
- announced $111 million over five years for Health
Canada in new and ongoing funding for critical drug treatment initiatives
for provinces and territories;
- $30.5 million over five years to bolster services
across Canada that will help First Nations and Inuit who suffer from
drug addictions, including $2M dedicated to the Vancouver's Downtown
East Side; and
- $10 million to support new treatment services that
will help to treat individuals living in Vancouver's Downtown East
Side.
-30-
Department of Justice Canada
November 2008