Pubdate: Fri, 3 Mar 2000 Source: Nunatsiaq News (Canada) Copyright: 2000 Nortext Publishing Corporation Contact: Box 8, Iqaluit, NT XOA OHO Canada Fax: (867) 979-4763 Website: http://www.nunatsiaq.com/ Forum: http://www.nunanet.com/politics/index.html Author: Seam McKibbon CONFUSION SURROUNDS FATE OF APEX TREATMENT CENTRE RANKIN INLET- The fate of a residential drug and alcohol treatment centre in Apex is still up in the air. Although the Nunavut justice department's director of corrections and community justice, Ron McCormick, told Nunatsiaq News last fall that a proposal to use the centre to treat BCC inmates for addictions had gone to cabinet for approval, the government made no such move, Health and Social Services Minister Ed Picco told the legislature this week. "Nothing has been presented to cabinet for approval," said Picco responding to repeated questions in the legislature from MLAs who were wondering what had happened to the proposal and why it was never acted upon. Picco told MLAs that officials from his department and the Department of Justice are talking about the idea, that a decision on it would be made in one week. However, last week, prior to Picco's statement, the health department's Judy Watts told delegates at a meeting of the Baffin Regional Health and Social Services Board that the Justice Department would not be using the centre, and said that no reason had been given as to why. "I can't comment on what Judy Watts said. Judy Watts doesn't speak for the government of Nunavut," Picco said. Picco said that he is considering a number of options for using the centre ,including a plan championed by Iqaluit residents Dr. Sam Law and Bill Ridell that would see the Iqaluit Women's Shelter move into the treatment centre in Apex, the Iqaluit Homeless Shelter move into the old women's shelter building, and the coast guard building in Iqaluit used as a space to train community addictions workers, said Picco. Picco said that although no one had complained about the idea of having inmates use the treatment centre in Apex, he still had to take into consideration possible safety concerns. Justice Minister Jack Anawak said that his department had not come up with an alternative space for treating BCC inmates for substance abuse. "It's just a proposal. We, the health minister and myself, are just talking," Anawak said. Some of the confusion over the status of the project may have arisen because the proposal had gone to the minister of justice and minister of health for discussion, and both positions are "cabinet posts." The treatment centre was originally constructed to be a detox facility for the entire Baffin region. It was closed by the Baffin health board in Dec. 1998 because it was not getting enough patients referred to it. Picco said the treatment facility has been used since to train community addictions councilors. Last fall McCormick said BCC had no capacity to run treatment programs for offenders. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea