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Before he died, Nelson含羞草研究社檚 Michael Guy relied on a now-closed support centre

Michael Guy was among a record number of people to die of drug poisonings in Nelson last year
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Michael Guy looks on as his brother Stefan holds one of Michael含羞草研究社檚 children. Michael died of toxic drug poisoning in Nelson in June 2023. Photo courtesy Guy family

For nearly three decades, Michael Guy含羞草研究社檚 family did everything they could to keep him alive.

His mother Judith advocated for him in doctor appointments, made daily calls to outreach workers and travelled the province to help him get off the streets.

Michael含羞草研究社檚 older brother, Stefan, worked extra hours to pay for food, winter clothing and the occasional hostel so he wouldn含羞草研究社檛 be spending every night on the street.

It was a fight Judith and Stefan came to believe was one they were fighting alone, and would eventually lose.

含羞草研究社淚t has been like watching a terminal illness for all these years take your child, and the world sits back and looks,含羞草研究社 says Judith.

Michael was just 14 years old when an injury led to him being given morphine at a hospital. It was the start of a substance-use disorder that ended in a Nelson encampment on June 28, 2023, where he died of a drug poisoning. He was 42.

Judith, who lives in Nanaimo, and Stefan in Vancouver, said they felt compelled to share Michael含羞草研究社檚 story following the in March.

Michael was a regular visitor to the Hub since it opened in July 2021, a federally funded program that offered a communal space for clients to access an episodic overdose prevention site, an employment program, housing assistance and other health resources.

It was also, crucially, a safe place for Michael. He used it to catch a couple hours sleep without fear of being attacked or robbed, could be with friends and receive packages from Judith, who would mail boxes of food and clothing to the only address she knew he would be at.

Knowing Michael was at the Hub also offered his family a little relief from the constant and chronic stress over his health and whereabouts.

含羞草研究社淗ours and hours of worry,含羞草研究社 says Stefan. 含羞草研究社淚t consumes your whole day, your whole week. I think that含羞草研究社檚 what含羞草研究社檚 so disappointing about the Hub closing. That was somewhere where if he was really in the shit, he could go there and get a hold of us fairly quickly.含羞草研究社

A spokesperson for the Nelson Committee on Homelessness, which managed the Hub, said it could no longer afford to keep the site open. The downtown location cost $400,000 annually to operate, which was deemed unaffordable after a 10 per cent decrease in federal funding and the end of a $220,000 grant from the Union of B.C. Municipalities.

Jeremy Kelly works for , a supportive program for those unhoused that operated out of the Hub.

In the weeks since the facility含羞草研究社檚 closure, Kelly said his team has received a 70-per-cent increase in calls, ranging from reported shoplifting and disturbances to concern for the health of people seen on Nelson streets.

含羞草研究社淸The Hub was] a central location. People losing that food service, people losing that clothing; it含羞草研究社檚 been a huge hole in the street culture.含羞草研究社

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Michael Guy (left) is seen here with his brother Stefan as teenagers. Photo courtesy of the Guy family

含羞草研究社淎 raw, beaten-up piece of human含羞草研究社

In July 2022, Judith woke in a hostel. She had her breakfast, then began the daily task of searching Nelson for her son.

She含羞草研究社檇 check Stepping Stones shelter or call Nelson Street Outreach, and if that failed she would wander the streets until spotting him. He had no phone and often changed where he was sleeping from night to night.

Judith, a retired nurse, had experience searching for Michael. When he was 15, Michael completed his first treatment program. He was, Judith was told, 含羞草研究社渁 star of the program.含羞草研究社

But it didn含羞草研究社檛 take, and shortly after he left the family含羞草研究社檚 home in Nanaimo for the streets of Victoria.

It devastated the Guy family. Judith began travelling to the city every two weeks to find and check on him, and took solace in the knowledge he was relying on a youth program for food. He also contacted his parents every birthday and holiday with a borrowed phone.

This was the same boy Judith remembers once running away from her in a grocery store to comfort a crying baby. The same teen who was quiet, easy going and a little mischievous. When Michael grew dreadlocks, Judith realized he was only doing it for the $15 his grandparents promised if he would shave them off. Once that was done, he含羞草研究社檇 start growing them back for the next payday.

含羞草研究社淗e was a keen observer of what was happening around him, and he had a very dry sense of humour,含羞草研究社 she says.

Michael had his first son at age 21, which prompted him to get sober. He worked as a carpenter, and after his marriage collapsed he started another relationship that begat another boy. But that partnership also ended, and not long after Michael relapsed.

He lived in various West Kootenay communities for 14 years, with stops in Rossland, Pass Creek, and Salmo. It was in Nakusp he had access to the provincial safe supply program that provides pharmaceutical opioids as clean alternatives to street drugs.

But gaining access to his prescription was not always worth the effort for Michael.

Walking to the pharmacy and making appointments on time was difficult for him, and if he missed a date he would resort to illicit drugs that provided a better high. They were also easier to take than Suboxone, an opioid agonist therapy he含羞草研究社檇 been prescribed as a safe alternative but came with its own side effects.

One of the program含羞草研究社檚 requirements meant Michael had to commute to Nelson by bus for regular urine testing. If he missed an appointment with the Nakusp pharmacy, Stefan said Michael would have to go to Nelson again for an in-person meeting to restart his prescription.

In late 2020, Michael underwent a 10-day detox at Castlegar含羞草研究社檚 Axis Family Resources. The next step for patients is typically a six-week stay at Bridgeway Recovery and Addictions Services, an intensive treatment program in Kelowna, for which a referral is required.

After that, people 19 and older can return to the West Kootenay and enter the eight-bed Kootenay Boundary Adult Supported Recovery Program, which focuses on life skills training but requires completion of an intensive treatment program like the one in Kelowna.

But Michael didn含羞草研究社檛 do more than the detox. It isn含羞草研究社檛 clear why, but Stefan says there was nothing prepared for him when he left Castlegar.

含羞草研究社淗e literally just walked out onto the street, and there was no housing, there was no recovery area, there was no one to even meet you to say, 含羞草研究社楬i, you just completed detox. What do you need?含羞草研究社 You literally just stepped out and no money, wrong day for the bus, and you含羞草研究社檙e left sitting there, a raw, beaten-up piece of human.含羞草研究社

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Michael Guy is seen here while taking an avalanche rescue course. Photo courtesy of the Guy family

The choice he made

Michael含羞草研究社檚 health declined after he moved to Nelson含羞草研究社檚 streets in 2021.

He broke his collarbone after falling off a bike. He was beat up and robbed repeatedly 含羞草研究社 shoes, clothes, phones, a bank card and ID, all taken from him on multiple occasions. And his addiction became worse.

Stefan says Michael used to wake in the middle of the night and stand in front of the Hub for hours because he worried he might miss Nelson Street Outreach taking him to an appointment.

But he also craved human connection, even a small acknowledgement that he existed. He found that at the Hub, where he could socialize with other people.

含羞草研究社淲e take it for granted, but a tiny little interaction is the entire basis of their entire day,含羞草研究社 says Stefan. 含羞草研究社淭hey含羞草研究社檙e literally walking, thinking, 含羞草研究社業 saw someone, I said hi, they recognized me, what a great day.含羞草研究社 We don含羞草研究社檛 really appreciate that that含羞草研究社檚 the level of of interaction and function that they含羞草研究社檙e dealing with.含羞草研究社

After Judith含羞草研究社檚 visit in July of 2022, it was obvious to the family that Michael needed an intervention. Stefan decided he would bring Michael back to Vancouver with him, but when he picked Michael up in August of that year he found his brother struggling to walk or even talk.

For the next eight months, Stefan made daily trips with Michael to a rapid access addiction clinic in Vancouver. Within a couple weeks Stefan saw his brother was improving and even contributing a little to the household.

Michael, Stefan says now, wanted to recover.

But as he made progress, Michael grew lonely. Stefan had to work, which meant Michael was usually left on his own during the day. He missed a girlfriend he had in the Kootenays, as well as friends in Nelson. Without drugs or the constant search for drugs, Judith says Michael lost purpose in his life.

含羞草研究社淭he worst part of removing the searching for drugs every day for people is that when that goes without some other supports, you have tons of time now but you have no interests. You have no way to to make the day productive.含羞草研究社

Two months before his death, Michael returned to Nelson, in April 2023.

He lived outdoors, began using street drugs again and soon developed a viral pneumonia that was likely exacerbated by his opiates, which can suppress the respiratory system. That led to multiple stays at hospitals in Nelson and Trail, and regular meetings with nurses at the Hub.

During this time, food programs and other social services in Nelson were facing funding cuts.

Judith addressed a letter to city council about this on June 27, 2023. In it, she wrote about how her son had 含羞草研究社渂ecome invisible as a citizen of Nelson.含羞草研究社

Michael was found dead of a drug poisoning the next day.

When an officer arrived at her home in Nanaimo to break the news, Judith didn含羞草研究社檛 cry. It was news she had already spent decades preparing to hear.

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Michael Guy in an undated photo with one of his two sons. Photo courtesy of the Guy family

Something less than a person

Nelson has become a difficult place to remain and stay alive in for anyone with a substance-use disorder.

Since the Hub closed in March, outside Nelson City Hall by unhoused residents protesting its closure and calling for more supportive housing.

BC Housing has since told the Nelson Star that the North Shore Inn, which it purchased in 2022 to provide subsidized housing and supports for street-entrenched individuals, since last fall.

Only seven people are currently housed at the site含羞草研究社檚 30 units, due to what the province says are required water and electrical renovations, but that work has yet to begin and BC Housing said it couldn含羞草研究社檛 provide a timeline for completion.

On April 15, the Ministry of Addictions and Mental Health announced it was funding for people living with mental health, trauma and addiction issues. None of the units will be located in the Kootenays.

Nelson still has no supervised site to smoke drugs, despite inhalation being the most common mode of consumption among people who die of drug poisoning in the province, according to the BC Coroners Service.

Interior Health had planned on a site at its Nelson Friendship Outreach Clubhouse, but forced it to scrap the idea.

Over due to toxic drugs since April 2016. Nelson, meanwhile, set a new annual record of .

One of those 16 people was Michael Guy.

Judith and Stefan believe Michael might be alive today if he didn含羞草研究社檛 live in rural B.C.; there are too many barriers and too few treatment options.

The tragedy, they say, is that Michael was a son, a brother, a father. But because he suffered from an addiction in B.C., Judith says her child was treated as something less than a person.

含羞草研究社淢ichael had a very strong sense of personal integrity and, unfortunately the way he lived, the rest of society never got to see that.含羞草研究社

In Nelson, a safe injection site and drug checking service is available at ANKORS, located at 101 Baker St. Stepping Stones emergency shelter at 816 Vernon St. can house 17 people for stays of up to 30 days.

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Tyler Harper

About the Author: Tyler Harper

I含羞草研究社檓 editor-reporter at the Nelson Star, where I含羞草研究社檝e worked since 2015.
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