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A Canadian lawmaker opposed a bill aimed at discouraging students from using drugs because she is 'deeply concerned' by the prospect of shaming people. British Columbia Legislative Assembly member Stephanie Higginson spoke in opposition of the Drug Use Prevention Education in Schools Act on Monday. The bill calls for drug use prevention education and mandatory anti‑drug messaging in schools. Higginson, who is a member of the social democratic political party BC NDP, said she is 'deeply concerned' about 'explicitly discouraging drug use' in schools. 'I believe this bill takes a misguided and potentially harmful approach that could do more damage than good,' she said. 'The approach outlined in this bill is not only outdated. And in fact, it reminds me of the 1980s era "Scared Straight" that was in place when I was young. 'The bill mandates a curriculum that explicitly discourages drug use and promotes stigma against drug use as a deterrent. This language is deeply concerning.' Higginson argued that stigmatizing drug use will discourage students from asking for help. 'The Drug Use Prevention Education in Schools Act has a compassionate name, but it discards evidence-based approaches in favor of outdated messaging that oversimplifies the complex realities faced by students and staff in schools today,' she said. The lawmaker noted that she supports protecting children, but does not think this bill will achieve that. 'We all want the children of this province to grow up healthy, safe, and informed. As a parent, as a former secondary school teacher, as a former school trustee, I fully support the goal of protecting youth from the harms of substance use,' she said. Higginson represents the Ladysmith-Oceanside district on Vancouver Island. A recent report from the British Columbia Coroners Service found that some of the highest number of unregulated drug deaths in 2025 thus far were in Vancouver and Central Vancouver Island, which includes Higginson's district. An average of five people per day died from unregulated drug use on British Columbia in July and August this year. Additionally, the agency found that there has been an increase in youth, under 19 years old, suspected drug toxicity deaths this year. Between January and August 2025, there has been 21 youth suspected drug toxicity deaths, compared to 15 deaths in the same period last year. British Columbia Legislative Assembly member Steve Kooner, who introduced the bill, said Higginson's remarks were shocking. 'I find it deeply concerning that this government can’t put their radical ideology aside for a single second to protect BC school kids from life-destroying drugs,' he said on X. Fellow Member of the Legislative Assembly Heather Maahs also blasted Higginson for opposing the bill. 'In other news NDP don’t like drug prevention programs in school. Apparently it stigmatizes drug use. I really thought Steve’s bill was a no brainer. Wait…,' she said.