Pubdate: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2000, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: 333 King St. E., Toronto, Ontario M5A 3X5 Canada Fax: (416) 947-3228 Website: http://www.canoe.ca/TorontoSun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/newsgroups.html Author: Thane Burnett RESCUE FOR INNU KIDS? Gas-Sniffing Crisis In Labrador Prompts Plans For Quick Action Dozens of troubled kids -- one as young as six -- may soon be removed from their homes in a Labrador Inuit community as leaders there plead with the province to step in and help. It would be a remarkable development, as the community of Sheshatshiu tries to save about 40 kids who are addicted to sniffing gas. Social workers are expected to begin evaluating the young people -- aged six to 16 -- this morning, with hopes of deciding their fates by this afternoon. "It's unclear when they could be taken out of the community, but things are working very fast -- things have to work fast because we've reached a crisis point," said Innu Nation president Peter Penashue last night from his home in Sheshatshiu, Labrador's largest Innu community , which has 1,200 residents. "Something has to be done." He and others want all kids found high on gas to be taken from their homes for their own safety, even if their parents protest. "Some would be put in other homes in the community, but others would have to be taken to a detox centre somewhere," Penashue said, adding it's the first time they've ever asked Newfoundland to take such a drastic step. "You now see a kid with a gas bag in one hand and a lit smoke in the other," he said. Residents have long wrestled with substance abuse and suicide among their young people, but he said the numbers are rising. So is the tension. 'GETTING WORSE' "You now see kids sniffing in the middle of the afternoon -- they just don't care," said RCMP Cpl. Rod Tiller, a police team leader for Sheshatshiu. "It's a real problem. I think it is getting worse." However, Newfoundland Health Minister Roger Grimes worried that officials could find themselves in court if social workers try to remove kids without their parents' permission. "You can't just take a child without some justified cause," he told a news conference. Unless parents voluntarily give up custody, an assessment is required to determine whether the child is in a safe environment, the minister said. If the home is deemed unsafe, then the child can be forcibly removed. However, Grimes said he knows he must act fast: "The (Innu) must really feel there's a need for some extraordinary action." Paul Rich, the Innu chief in Sheshatshiu, said gas sniffing has become commonplace in his home town. "Some carry a cigarette in one hand and a gas bag in the other. It's a deadly combination," he said. A survey by a public-health nurse found more than half of all teens in the small community sniff gas, take drugs, drink or have thought about committing suicide. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst