Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jul 2000 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2000 The Toronto Star Contact: One Yonge St., Toronto ON, M5E 1E6 Fax: (416) 869-4322 Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Forum: http://www.thestar.com/editorial/disc_board/ Author: Greg Joyce, Canadian Press ADDICTS GATHER TO REMEMBER EAST VANCOUVER DRUG DEATHS 2,000 Crosses Mark Number Of Overdoses In B.C. Since 1992 VANCOUVER -- Tree-lined Oppenheimer Park - with its gravel infield and lush, green outfield - is a popular spot for softball games, sleeping, drug dealing, shooting up and dying. The inner-city park in one of the most drug-infested neighbourhoods in Canada was the gathering spot yesterday for about 200 addicts who marched there to stand before 2,000 makeshift crosses erected to mark overdose deaths in B.C. since 1992. "Overdosing is the leading cause of deaths in B.C. for people aged 30 to 49," said Bud Osborn, an activist for the blighted area. "Three years ago we marched here and erected 1,000 crosses and now we've got 2,000," added the former heroin addict and current street worker with the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users. The wooden crosses provided a dramatic effect as some addicts walked slowly between endless rows, writing names of dead friends and loved ones. At the back of the park, a huge red flag with "The Killing Fields" printed in yellow loomed over the crosses. Addict Harold House, from Hobbema, Alta., stood next to a cross marking the overdose death three years ago of his common-law wife. "Ninety per cent of the people I know here are drug addicts," said House, who buys five to six heroin "flaps" a day. "The government should look into this problem more seriously. They should come here and look at the crosses." Getting heroin in the area is easy and cheap and he said he gets his drug money honestly. "I do a lot of recycling. I don't do crime." The markers also provided a backdrop for speakers who chastised the three levels of government while advocating a more liberal approach to drug use found in the Netherlands, Switzerland and elsewhere in Europe. "These are all preventable deaths," said Osborn, who was among those calling for the establishment of safe injection sites, methadone programs and treatment centres. The groups say the B.C. government spends $50 million annually on drug and alcohol programs, out of the health ministry's $8-billion budget. Other cities have skid rows frequented by addicts. But Vancouver's skid row, only a few blocks from trendy Gastown and Chinatown, is unique in Canada. Authorities estimate there are about 9,000 junkies in the 30 square blocks of the downtown east side. Cheap, accessible drugs and needle availability has contributed to huge increases in tuberculosis, syphilis, hepatitis A, HIV and AIDS and hepatitis C. One report a few years ago said the notorious area has the highest rate of HIV infection in the developed world. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D