
In the centre of Ontario's drug crisis, Fort William First Nation fights for new facility
Social Sharing
After declaring a state of emergency over its toxic drug crisis last summer, Fort William First Nation hasn't stopped advocating for more resources for its members.
The Ojibway First Nation, which neighbours Thunder Bay, Ont., has purchased a facility at an undisclosed, off-reserve location to support people who have completed a detox program as they wait to get into treatment.
The problem? Neither the provincial nor federal government has agreed to help support the facility's operating costs, according to Chief Michele Solomon.
"Because it's not on reserve, we are not funded or assisted by the federal government, and the provincial government funding sources push us back to the federal government — so we become a hot potato between these governments," Solomon said.
The Thunder Bay district, which encompasses Fort William, continues to have the highest opioid-related death rate in Ontario at nearly five times the provincial average, according to the latest report from Ontario's Office of the Chief Coroner.
"Whatever challenges you see Thunder Bay facing … this is amplified in a community like ours because of the lack of resources that are available at our fingertips," said Solomon.
We become a hot potato between these governments. - Chief Michele Solomon, Fort William First Nation
About 1,000 people live in Fort William, while the First Nation itself has just under 3,000 members. While the community has services available to help those dependent on substances, including a community mental health and addiction harm reduction outreach program, Solomon hopes the addiction care facility will bridge the gaps created by long wait times to get into treatment.
"We're already looking at a $1-million investment into this facility, and we want it operational. We want our people to be able to use this facility," Solomon said.
"We believe that this is a model of care that other First Nations and other communities, I think, could incorporate … and I believe that it's a missing piece in the mental health and addiction system."
Province, feds speak to addictions investments
Indigenous Services Canada (ISC) spent more than $440,000 on mental health and addictions support in Fort William First Nation in 2024-2025 through the Indigenous Health Equity Fund, said spokesperson Pascal Laplante in an emailed statement to CBC News on Friday.
In the same fiscal year, "ISC provided approximately $225,000 in new annual funding under the Indigenous Health Equity Fund to support Fort William's health priorities, as determined by the community," he said.
While Laplante did not specifically mention the addiction care facility Fort William has purchased, he said "ISC is aware of the challenges that Fort William First Nation is experiencing as they see a rise in addictions in the region.
"Meetings have been held with the community and the province of Ontario to discuss long-term supports and address critical needs in response to their state of emergency," Laplante said.
The closest treatment centres to Fort William are Ka-Na-Chi-Hih (youth treatment) in Thunder Bay, and Dilico Adult Residential Addiction located in Fort William First Nation, he said. Furthermore, ISC's Non-Insured Health Benefits program covers travel costs to the closest appropriate and available treatment centre.
When asked about the province's support for Fort William's addiction care facility, a spokesperson for Ontario's Ministry of Health provided an emailed statement.
While they did not mention any funding specifically for Fort William, they said the government "is using every tool we have to help people get the treatment they need by expanding access to safe, comprehensive mental health and addiction services," said spokesperson Ema Popovic on Thursday.
In the Thunder Bay area, this includes support for:
A new Homelessness and Addictions Recovery Treatment (HART) Hub.
Nearly 60 new addictions beds and safe sobering beds at Dilico Anishinabek Family Care and St. Joseph's Care Group.
A new Youth Wellness Hub.
The Superior North Specialized Treatment and Alternative Responders mobile crisis response team.
Creating a recovery community
Long Lake #58 First Nation has been taking a community-led approach to addressing alcoholism and addiction by supporting collective healing with its members.
The Ojibway community does not have a dedicated detox centre on reserve. Instead, they've been bringing groups of people to a First Nation-owned hotel in Thunder Bay — about 300 kilometres away — to participate in a 10-day detox program before going into treatment.
Long Lake #58 First Nation supports dozens of its members as they detox
2 months ago
Duration 2:10
The First Nation is celebrating 22 of its members who recently completed a treatment program at Dilico Anishinabek Family Care.
"Seeing them look so healthy and actually want to do the work and still want to continue their healing, and just working towards bettering their lives, it's really amazing to see," said Noreen Agnew, manager of Long Lake #58's band rep program.
Participants completed a month-long post-treatment program at Pasha Lake, where they did traditional activities on the land such as fishing and sharing circles. Now, they're back in Thunder Bay and preparing to return to their First Nation after a nearly four-month journey, Agnew said.
Kyle Arnold is a community support worker specializing in addiction for Long Lake #58. He's more than six years into his recovery from addiction.
"I think it's so important for them to heal together because they are creating a recovery community within their community, and I think that's the piece that's been missing," Arnold said of the group from Long Lake #58.
"A lot of them are related, they're family, and it's strengthened them as a core — and it's bringing recovery into [Long Lake #58]."
Agnew said a key part of the program's success has been listening to participants "and letting them lead us."
"We're giving them the opportunity to tell us, 'OK, this is what we need.' So OK, let's help them do that," she said.
Back in Fort William First Nation, Solomon said she's going to continue pushing for community-led solutions to the drug crisis.
"When you have services that are designed by the community that they're intended to serve, then it will have those values in mind. It will have those ways of knowing and being in mind," said Solomon.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
24 minutes ago
- CTV News
Control zones set up in Fraser Valley, B.C., after Newcastle disease detected
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is seen in Ottawa on Wednesday, June 26, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick CHILLIWACK — The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has put up controls on the movements of birds around two commercial poultry farms experiencing the first outbreaks of virulent Newcastle disease in Canada in more than 50 years. The establishment of the primary control zones in the Fraser Valley means that birds, byproducts and items that have contacted the birds cannot be moved within or through the areas without permission. The agency says the virus affects both wild and domestic birds and can cause pink eye in humans, and birds at the infected farms must be culled. The agency says that before the disease was detected in B.C. this month, including at a commercial pigeon operation, the last infections in Canada were reported in 1973. The CFIA says the ailment is of great concern to the world's agricultural community since it's highly contagious and threatens poultry. It says Newcastle disease can decrease egg production in domestic birds and cause high numbers of sudden deaths in a flock, while wild birds can develop wing paralysis and be left unable to fly. It says the risk to humans is low if gloves are worn while handling infected birds, and that the disease was rarely found to kill wild birds before 1990. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2025.


CTV News
24 minutes ago
- CTV News
Liberals, Conservatives pass major projects legislation in House of Commons
Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks at a press conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Thursday, June 19, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/ Patrick Doyle Conservative members of Parliament voted with the minority Liberal government to pass its marquee major projects legislation Friday evening, setting it up to become law before Canada Day. The legislation, also known as the one Canadian economy act, would allow the government to green-light a list of projects that have been deemed to be in the national interest, fast-tracking their approvals. The Liberals have called it the core of the government's domestic economic response to U.S. tariffs. 'This is what makes us different from the United States, this is what makes us more independent from the United States, this is what's going to move us forward,' Prime Minister Mark Carney said at a press conference after the vote, adding the legislation needed to pass quickly 'because we are in a crisis.' 'And if you don't think we're in a crisis, go to Sault Ste. Marie, go to Hamilton, go to Windsor.' After the second of two votes in the House of Commons on Friday, Carney crossed the floor to shake hands with Opposition House leader Andrew Scheer and Conservative deputy leader Melissa Lantsman. Two votes were held instead of one after the House Speaker ruled that the legislation had two distinct parts without a clear common element. That allowed the Bloc Quebecois and NDP members to vote in favour of the first part of the bill -- which looks to tackle internal trade barriers -- and against the more controversial second part dealing with major projects. The major projects bill grants the government sweeping powers to quickly approve projects that are deemed to be in the national interest. Provincial and territorial premiers have given Carney lists of projects they want to see approved, but no national list of projects has been made public so far. 'We all agree that more fulsome conversations are needed to select the nation-building projects and to determine the conditions that they must fulfil. In other words, the real work begins now,' Carney said. The legislation has drawn criticism from Indigenous leaders and environmental groups who say it gives too much power to the federal cabinet to bypass existing laws. The legislation was introduced on June 6 and was pushed through the House after about eight hours of committee study on Tuesday and Wednesday. The House transport committee did amend the bill to, among other things, remove the Indian Act from a list of laws the government can sidestep when determining whether a project should move forward. First Nations leaders have warned the bill could violate their constitutionally protected rights and may lead to legal challenges. Carney emphasized the need to respect the constitutional rights of Indigenous Peoples in his press conference on Friday. 'The major projects office will have an Indigenous advisory council whose core function will be to honour Section 35 rights in the implementation of this bill,' he said. He promised to hold full-day summits with First Nations, Inuit and Metis rights-holders and leaders in the coming weeks, alongside Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Rebecca Alty and Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty. 'Consultation, co-operation, engagement and participation are at the heart of this bill,' he said. The bill is now headed to the Senate, which is scheduled to sit until June 27. By Sarah Ritchie. With files from Kyle Duggan and Alessia Passafiume.


CTV News
26 minutes ago
- CTV News
Sudbury marks 41st Workers' Memorial Day
On Friday in Sudbury, a ceremony was held to mark the 41st anniversary of Workers' Memorial Day at Unifor Local 598. On Friday in Sudbury, a ceremony was held to mark the 41st anniversary of Workers' Memorial Day at Unifor Local 598. The day recognizes the men who were killed at 10:12 a.m. on June 20, 1984, after a seismic event caused a collapse in what was formerly called the Falconbridge Mine. Three workers were killed instantly and one was missing. Rescue teams worked frantically to locate the fourth person, who succumbed to his injuries after a second event caused further delays. Workers' Memorial Day On Friday in Sudbury, a ceremony was held to mark the 41st anniversary of Workers' Memorial Day recognizes the men who were killed at 10:12 a.m. on June 20, 1984, after a seismic event caused a collapse in what was formerly called the Falconbridge Mine. (Amanda Hicks/CTV News) 'It is very important for the local and for the members (and) for the people that were there when a lot of their brothers or sisters were injured or killed on the job,' said Brian McDonald, recording secretary for the pensioners association at Unifor Local 598. 'I knew quite a few of them over the years. And … it's always close to the heart. It's very, very, very emotional for me.' NDP Nickel Belt MPP and NDP health critic France Gelinas was working at the hospital when the accident occurred. Many other sectors need change Gelinas said while there have been many improvements in health and safety since then, more needs to be done. 'We have done a lot in Sudbury to push health and safety forward, mainly in mining and a bit in forestry,' she said. Workers' Memorial Day On Friday in Sudbury, a ceremony was held to mark the 41st anniversary of Workers' Memorial Day recognizes the men who were killed at 10:12 a.m. on June 20, 1984, after a seismic event caused a collapse in what was formerly called the Falconbridge Mine. (Amanda Hicks/CTV News) 'But there are many other sectors where people work, where health and safety are not a priority. But those workers do get hurt, those workers do get injured and some of them even die.' Gelinas said transportation is an area where too many serious accidents are occurring. 'If you look at the number of new drivers that are involved in accidents -- I would say it's not an accident,' she said. 'It's because the health and safety standards that the government should be putting in place are not in place, are lacking. Some of them have even been taken away. And you see there, you see the consequences of that with multiple accidents on all of the roads in the north, not only in the winter but in the summer.' Sudbury Mayor Paul Lefebvre said the day is one of remembrance, while also pushing for change. 'As a community, we are a leader in health and safety, because unfortunately, the people that we have lost, we learn with every experience,' Lefebvre said. 'Certainly, we've got to strive to get better, be better together. And that's why we're here today.' The ceremony was marked by a bagpipe procession, speeches and the laying of flowers at the cenotaph. Related: Memorial day in Sudbury honours workers who were killed on the job Sombre ceremony marks 40th Workers' Memorial Day in Sudbury