Needle buyback program nixed by Vernon council
Following city staff’s recommendation not to endorse a needle buyback program, Vernon city council followed suit and nixed the program in favor of other initiatives.
A needle buyback program was originally proposed by the Activate Safety Task Force in 2018, citing successes in Penticton and Kamloops, but staff later discovered both programs collapsed following their implementation.
“A year ago I would have jumped on this, but I think we’ve seen a lot of the things that we have put in place as a council that have made a huge difference in this community, and we don’t hear as much about the needles as we did last year. We were kind of caught off guard; that doesn’t mean that we don’t have a problem in this community but I don’t think the needle buyback program is the solution,” Coun. Dalvir Nahal stated.
City staff recommended a service level increase for next year’s budget for the Folks on Spokes Program, an on-call hotline that businesses call in order for someone to collect discarded sharps.











