What His Story Teaches Us About Compassion, Language & the Opioid Crisis
When a farmer driving Highway 7 spotted police tape shimmering in the canola flats west of Saskatoon on 4 June 2025, few imagined the discovery would soon be linked to the city’s fifth homicide of the year. Within days, the Saskatoon Police Service confirmed that the remains were those of 31‑year‑old Chad Romanski and that investigators were treating his death as murder.
→ Saskatoon Police Service News Release
Yet Chad’s life cannot be summed up by crime‑scene coordinates. Born in Saskatoon on 25 September 1993, he was the “giggly kid who loved race cars and dinosaurs,” the young dad who “wholeheartedly adored his little girl, Melita,” and the family joker who never travelled without his grandfather’s black cowboy hat.
→ Obituary, Martens Warman Funeral Home
“There was far more to my boy than his addictions,” his father told reporters after identifying the body.
→ CBC News: Father of Saskatoon homicide victim says son was more than his addictions
For six remarkable years—roughly the span of Melita’s young life—Chad maintained recovery. But relapse can shadow even determined journeys. His obituary, written with unflinching honesty, names opioid-use disorder “a beast,” reminding readers that love alone cannot conquer a chronic medical condition.
To learn from this experience, and provide resources for others who may be facing hardships, resources are provided here.
Person-first language matters here: the National Institute on Drug Abuse urges us to speak of “people with substance-use disorders,” not “addicts,” to reduce stigma and open doors to treatment.
→ NIDA: Words Matter
CAMH’s primer for journalists echoes that call, noting that words shape public understanding—and policy—around opioids.
→ CAMH: Addiction and Opioids—A Primer for Journalists (PDF)
Chad’s death also intersects with a wider public-health emergency. In 2022 alone, an estimated 6.1 million Americans lived with opioid-use disorder, and Canada lost nearly 4,000 lives to opioid toxicity.
→ CDC: Preventing Opioid Use Disorder
→ CCSA: Strategies for Addressing the Opioid Crisis
Cross-border experts now stress comprehensive strategies: early harm-reduction services, trauma-informed care, and peer-led outreach that values lived experience. Saskatchewan’s own opioid-safety pages point residents to take-home naloxone, drug-checking, and treatment pathways, while the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health CADTH’s environmental scan catalogues more than 100 Canadian programs offering opioid-agonist therapies, rapid-access clinics, and drug-treatment courts.
→ Saskatchewan Government: Opioid Resources
→ CADTH: Programs for Treatment of Opioid Addiction in Canada (PDF)
Psychologists are also addressing a disturbing trend: youth overdose deaths are on the rise, prompting new interventions grounded in mental health, resilience, and prevention.
→ APA: New Approaches to Youth Substance Misuse
In the wake of Chad Romanski’s passing, Saskatoon confronts not only a homicide investigation but a policy crossroads. Will we expand low-barrier treatment, scale up culturally safe peer supports, and adopt language that heals rather than harms? Or will we retreat to old narratives that collapse a complex life into a mug-shot headline?
Chad’s story asks us to choose the former. It asks reporters to mind their words, communities to hold space for grief without judgment, and policymakers to back evidence over stigma. Most of all, it asks us to remember a laughing father in a black cowboy hat—because a person’s life should never be defined by the worst day of it.




Taking Action: Saskatoon’s Local Response
Since 2021, the Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) has operated a Rapid Access Addiction Medicine (RAAM) Clinic out of St. Paul’s Hospital (1702 20 th St. W.). Patients can walk in—no referral required—and receive same‑day assessment, opioid‑agonist therapy prescriptions (such as buprenorphine or methadone), and links to longer‑term counselling or inpatient care.
→ RAAM Clinics – SHA
On the harm‑reduction front, Prairie Harm Reduction (PHR) opened Saskatchewan’s first supervised consumption site in 2020 at 1516 20 th St. W. The centre delivers sterile‑supply exchange, naloxone training, peer support, and family programming in a culturally safe space.
These initiatives echo the recommendations of a University of Saskatchewan College of Medicine study that called for “better coordination of existing services, a one‑stop shop with supervised consumption, and a crisis response plan paired with a long‑term provincial strategy.”
→ USask Study Offers Solutions
According to global data from Our World in Data, the estimated annual number of deaths from opioid use disorders in Canada is 14.68 per 100,000 people (as of 2021)—a rate considered very high in global health terms, pointing to a serious public health emergency that requires ongoing intervention, education, and harm reduction.
→ Our World in Data: Deaths from Opioid Use
Where to Turn for Help in Saskatoon
| Service | What They Do | Contact |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency Overdose | Call 911 immediately. Administer naloxone if available. | 911 |
| Saskatoon Crisis Intervention Service (24/7) | Mobile crisis team for mental‑health or substance‑use emergencies. | 306‑933‑6200 |
| RAAM Clinic – St. Paul’s Hospital | Same‑day medical assessment & opioid‑agonist therapy. Walk‑in. | 306‑655‑5754; 1702 20 th St W |
| Prairie Harm Reduction Safe Consumption Site | Supervised consumption, supplies, peer & family support, naloxone. | 306‑242‑5005; 1516 20 th St W |
| Calder Centre (Adult In‑Patient) | 32‑bed four‑week residential treatment program. | 306‑655‑4500; 2003 Arlington Ave |
| Calder Centre (Youth Detox & Treatment) | Seven‑ to 10‑day detox plus 28‑day youth program. | 306‑655‑4526; 3275 Preston Ave S |
| Family Service Saskatoon – West Winds | Out‑patient counselling & family supports. | 306‑244‑0127; 3311 Fairlight Dr |
| HealthLine 811 | 24/7 nurse advice & mental‑health/addictions triage. Dial 811 anywhere in SK. | 811 |
| 9‑8‑8 | National suicide prevention & mental‑health crisis text/voice line. | Dial or text 9‑8‑8 |
Where to Turn for Help in Saskatoon
| Service | What They Do | Contact |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency Overdose | Call 911 immediately. Administer naloxone if available. | 911 |
| Saskatoon Crisis Intervention Service (24/7) | Mobile crisis team for mental‑health or substance‑use emergencies. | 306‑933‑6200 saskatooncrisis.ca |
| RAAM Clinic – St. Paul’s Hospital | Same‑day medical assessment & opioid‑agonist therapy. Walk‑in. | 306‑655‑5754; 1702 20 th St W saskhealthauthority.ca |
| Prairie Harm Reduction Safe Consumption Site | Supervised consumption, supplies, peer & family support, naloxone. | 306‑242‑5005; 1516 20 th St W prairiehr.ca |
| Calder Centre (Adult In‑Patient) | 32‑bed four‑week residential treatment program. | 306‑655‑4500; 2003 Arlington Ave mapquest.com |
| Calder Centre (Youth Detox & Treatment) | Seven‑ to 10‑day detox plus 28‑day youth program. | 306‑655‑4526; 3275 Preston Ave Sudada.ca |
| Family Service Saskatoon – West Winds | Out‑patient counselling & family supports. | 306‑244‑0127; 3311 Fairlight Dr caredove.com |
| HealthLine 811 | 24/7 nurse advice & mental‑health/addictions triage. Dial 811 anywhere in SK.saskatchewan.ca | |
| 9‑8‑8 | National suicide prevention & mental‑health crisis text/voice line. | Dial or text 9‑8‑8saskatchewan.ca |
Chad Romanski’s legacy is a reminder that grief and action can coexist. By expanding rapid‑access medical care, supporting peer‑run harm‑reduction spaces, and ensuring every resident knows exactly where to turn, Saskatoon is writing the next chapter—one that honours lives rather than headlines.
Bibliography
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American Psychological Association. (2024). More teens than ever are overdosing: New approaches to youth substance misuse. https://www.apa.org/monitor/2024/03/new-approaches-youth-substance-misuse
CADTH. (2019). Programs for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction in Canada. https://www.cda-amc.ca/sites/default/files/es/es0335-programs-for-treatment-opioid-addiction-in-Canada.pdf
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