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Ontario PC Leader Doug Ford speaks during a campaign rally in Ottawa on April 16, 2018.Dave Chan/The Globe and Mail

Doug Ford says he is “dead against” supervised injection sites and believes the focus should be on drug rehabilitation instead.

And if elected premier of Ontario in June, the Progressive Conservative Leader says he will do everything he can to fight the opioid crisis and get people who are struggling with addiction the help they need.

“If your son, daughter, loved one ever had an addiction, would you want them to go in a little area and do more drugs? I am dead against that,” Mr. Ford said Friday. “We have to help these people. We can’t just keep feeding them and feeding them.”

When pressed for details, his campaign said Mr. Ford would release his plan to address mental health and the opioid crisis in the coming weeks.

Mr. Ford, whose late brother Rob Ford struggled with substance abuse and admitted to using crack cocaine, made the comments in Sarnia after announcing that a Tory government would create 30,000 long-term care beds over the next 10 years to ease the burden on hospitals and cut wait times.

He did not say how much the plan would cost, nor how it would be funded. His campaign said more information on costing would come in the coming weeks.

The governing Liberals have also promised to add 30,000 new long-term care beds in the next decade, while the New Democrats have said they would create 40,000 in that time.

Liberal campaign co-chair Deb Matthews said in a statement that Mr. Ford needs to explain how he plans to pay for the new beds considering he has vowed to reduce government spending.

Health Minister Helena Jaczek, meanwhile, said Mr. Ford’s comments on supervised injection sites not only perpetuate the stigma around mental health and addiction, but also put people’s lives at risk.

“Has Doug Ford ever even visited one of these sites? Because if he has, he would know that beyond reversing overdoses, these sites regularly connect substance users to addictions treatment, withdrawal-management programs and other health and social supports that they would otherwise never have access to,” she said in a statement.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath echoed that sentiment, saying Mr. Ford’s stand would “drag Ontario backward and deny people the care they need.”

“The opioid-overdose epidemic has touched every community in Ontario and devastated families,” she said. “New Democrats will listen to front-line care workers, declare a public health emergency and take urgent action to save lives.”

Francisco Sapp, co-director of the Ontario HIV and Substance Use Training Program, said that until drugs are decriminalized, harm-reduction strategies such as supervised consumption sites are the best hope to keep people alive amid what has become a public-health emergency.

While access to treatment and rehabilitation centres is critical for people who choose to go that route, abstinence-based programs have a low success rate, and forced rehabilitation would be “drastically lower,” he said.

Harm reduction, meanwhile, has proved to be effective in reducing opioid-related deaths, he said. The site at Toronto’s Moss Park has reversed about 200 overdoses so far, he said.

The province said earlier this year it had approved funding for seven supervised injection sites, five of which had already opened.

Late last year, Ontario also received an exemption from the federal government allowing it to approve and fund temporary overdose prevention sites. The first such site opened in London, Ont., in February.

The government has pledged to spend more than $222-million over three years to tackle the growing opioid crisis in the province, with money earmarked to expand harm-reduction services and hire more front-line staff.

Government data show there were 1,053 opioid-related deaths from January to October of last year, compared with 694 during the same period in 2016.

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