Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew says a facility set up to detain people who are highly intoxicated for up to three days is expected to be fully operational by December. Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew speaks to media in Winnipeg Saturday, July 4, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/John Woods
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew says a facility set up to detain people who are highly intoxicated for up to three days is expected to be fully operational by December. Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew speaks to media in Winnipeg Saturday, July 4, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/John Woods
WINNIPEG - A facility the Manitoba government is spearheading to detain people who are intoxicated on methamphetamines and other long-lasting drugs for up to three days is slated to begin accepting people by the end of the month.聽
Premier Wab Kinew announced the timeline on Thursday, a day after the provincial legislature passed a bill to extend the amount of time people under the influence of narcotics can be detained, from the current 24-hour maximum that was traditionally aimed at alcohol use to 72 hours.聽
Kinew told reporters at an unrelated event that the site located in Winnipeg's Point Douglas neighbourhood could start seeing detainees in the next two weeks, and is expected to be fully operational as of December.聽
The premier said the new facility is to offer compassionate services that are often not seen in so-called "drunk tanks" where people may be lodged in cells.聽
"The new facility is going to be more humane, more dignified, but most importantly, it's going to be somewhere where somebody who's causing problems on drugs can be taken so that they're not in the emergency room waiting room, they're not at the bus stop, they're not bugging you while you're trying to go to the grocery store." said Kinew.聽
The initial stage of the program will have police working with the Health Sciences Centre and the detention facility staff to determine when people under the influence need to be diverted from emergency rooms, the premier said.聽
Employees from the non-profit Main Street Project will be staffing the facility, along with paramedics and health-care staff.聽
The government said it consulted with doctors working in the addictions field who were in favour of the approach, stressing there needs to be addiction support and resources at the facility.聽
"We want to ensure that we are meeting people and supporting, and ensuring that they can get onto a path of recovery," said Bernadette Smith, minister of housing, addictions and homelessness.聽
The NDP government's bill was supported by first responders, some parents of addicts and Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham, but also led to weeks of political debates and threats.聽
The Progressive Conservatives proposed amendments to the bill that would require annual reporting on the number of people being detained, forbid protective care centres within 500 metres of schools, daycares and similar buildings, and require public consultations on new sites. The amendments were defeated by the NDP majority in the chamber.
The NDP accused the Tories of delaying the bill and said their call for 500-metre buffer zones was unworkable. The Tories rejected the accusation and said they supported the bill's aims but wanted to incorporate changes based on public feedback in a recent committee hearing.
The bill was also criticized by some community groups who said holding people against their will for up to 72 hours effectively criminalizes addiction.
The bill, expected to become law in the coming days, requires that a detained person be assessed at "reasonable intervals" to gauge their intoxication. They are also to be seen by a health professional after 24 and 48 hours.
This report by 好色tvwas first published Nov. 6, 2025.聽