Burlington

Burlington safe injection site to launch without supervised drug use

NYC safe injection site

By Guy Page

Burlington’s planned Overdose Prevention Center will move forward without supervised consumption of illegal drugs in its initial phase, according to a status update circulated this week by Building Burlington’s Future, a local advocacy group that has been meeting with city and state officials.

$1.1 million in state funding for the pilot safe injection site project was approved by the 2024 Vermont Legislature, over the veto of Gov. Phil Scott.

In a lengthy Dec. 20 email to supporters, BBF said the city has concluded that allowing on-site, supervised consumption of controlled substances would require more preparation, staffing capacity, and community engagement than is currently feasible. 

As a result, supervised drug use will not be part of the center’s first phase.

Instead, the initial focus will be on treatment, stabilization, and connecting people struggling with substance use disorder to care and recovery services.

“The City has determined that supervised consumption isn’t part of the first phase of this project,” BBF wrote, describing the approach as a way to move forward with services that can be implemented more quickly while broader questions remain unresolved.

The update comes amid ongoing debate in Burlington over how to respond to drug use, overdoses, and public safety concerns in the downtown and surrounding neighborhoods. Proposals for supervised consumption sites — sometimes referred to as “safe injection sites” — have drawn sharp opposition from some residents and lawmakers, even as harm-reduction advocates argue they can save lives.

BBF said it has spent recent weeks meeting with the mayor’s office and the governor’s team, sharing observations “from the ground” and urging closer alignment between city and state strategies. The group pointed to recent developments such as the launch of the Accountability Court and improved coordination among local and state partners as signs that collaboration is beginning to take shape.

While supervised consumption is off the table for now, other major decisions remain unresolved. The location of the overdose prevention center has not yet been announced, and the full range of services it may eventually offer is still under discussion.

BBF said the city plans additional opportunities for public engagement as details are finalized and encouraged residents to follow city updates or contact city staff for more information.

The group characterized its role as pushing for “practical steps that make our community safer” while expanding access to treatment and recovery, stressing that its work is focused on policy outcomes rather than partisan politics.

City officials have not yet released a formal timeline for opening the center, but BBF’s update signals that Burlington intends to proceed with a model centered on treatment and connections to care — without supervised drug consumption — at least in its opening phase.


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Categories: Burlington

8 replies »

  1. My first thought was OMG! Then I reminded myself “it’s Burlington”! Then they will ask for more assistance from Law enforcement.

  2. You people in Burlington need to do your Christmas shopping up in St. Albans Town where you will not have to trip over used needles and deal with panhandlers.

  3. I’m a little confused here. They got permission to have this center by convincing everyone that there would be staff there to maintain order and supervise drug use. Now, if I am reading this correct, they are not going to have supervision there. Not anyone? Or just not medical staff? I cannot imagine anyone that is pushing this center wanting it near where they live knowing that it is full of drug users…using with no one there to monitor what else might be going on. Are they supposed to use their drugs and then just wander off into he streets? Will they hang out there, unsupervised, for the entire day? Put some chairs and benches out front? Spend the night? And I have to ask…who in their right mind would want a job being responsible for a clinic full of drug users and trying to maintain any kind of order? Perhaps one of the Legislators who approved this would like to volunteer?

  4. So, a site without supervision should make it so much more appealing to the public and hence everyone will now be competing over whose neighborhood will get to play host. The whole point of marketing this to the public was as a place where supervision would provide rapid response in case of overdoses. The proponents are still playing the “harm reduction” card though by stating their intention to “connect people struggling with substance use disorder to care and recovery services”, which sounds like it will consist of a kiosk or a stack of pamphlets on a table. But now comes the fun with the little detail of deciding where will it be located. $10+ million in the hole, and Mayor Emma-Hyphen is dead set on making her dream project materialize, but with a somewhat cheaper version in the interest of fiscal restraint. Rock on, BTV…

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