Pubdate: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 The Vancouver Sun Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Ian Mulgrew Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n093/a02.html http://www.crimepreventiondrugtreatment.com/ Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) Items related to the Vancouver plan and the Sun's series Searching for solutions - Fix on the Downtown Eastside http://www.mapinc.org/thefix.htm COALITION GATHERS TO FIGHT OWEN'S DRUG POLICY Roughly 700 people showed up Thursday night at the largest and most significant political gathering in Vancouver since the Non-Partisan Association's convention before the last civic election. The $35-a-plate dinner was a fund raiser for the new Community Alliance -- a coalition of Downtown Eastside business owners and primarily middle-class inner-city residents. Held at the Floata Seafood Restaurant, it was an enormous success for the group, which is dismissed by some as a small gang of right-wing zealots. The crowd belied that knock -- around the room was a who's who of the Chinatown, Victory Square, Gastown and Strathcona neighbourhoods. I think the impressively large turnout will give Mayor Philip Owen pause about his much publicized drug policy, A Framework for Action. These were his constituents, many in the room were senior NPA organizers and fund raisers, and they are mighty angry at what Owen's been up to. The dinner raised serious doubts in my mind about Owen's ability to find solutions for the blighted Downtown Eastside. And I figure it heralds a heightened political war over how to renovate the area. The Alliance is mounting vehement and vocal opposition to the mayor's so-called Four Pillar proposals and instead demanding tougher policing and a zero-tolerance approach to drugs. Gail Sparrow, the Liberal hoping to oust cabinet minister Jenny Kwan in the looming provincial election, attended, although her opponent was nowhere to be seen. "The status quo has to go," said Sparrow of living conditions in the riding of Vancouver Mount Pleasant, which encompasses the Downtown Eastside. Saying one of her own friends is currently missing in the Downtown Eastside, Sparrow said the policies of the provincial NDP and the civic government have failed. "Things have gotten worse and worse and worse," said Sparrow, a former chief of the local Musqueam Indian band. "Governments have thrown money at the problem and it hasn't helped. It's become an industry down there and there needs to be accountability. There's a wake-up call here and if they don't listen there's going to be a bigger problem down there. When the people lead, the leaders should follow." Fred Bass, one of two left-wing coalition city councillors, also attended and left mulling over the show of force and heart-felt feelings expressed. Bass, an addiction specialist and member of the B.C. Medical Association's addiction committee, said the city must find a way to bridge the chasm between the Alliance and some low-income and drug-dependent residents who are demanding safe-injection sites, more services and that police turn a blind eye to illegal drug activity. "I think it's very important to address the concern of everyone in that room that there isn't equal security across Vancouver," Bass told me Friday. "I'm going to make some inquiries about that. I'm going to be talking to the mayor and the chief of police about that." But unlike Sparrow, Bass doesn't agree with the Alliance's politics. He disagreed with most of the evening's speakers, who recited a litany of horror stories about trying to live and work in the decrepit area. "I've been around the planet long enough to know that when you put a lot of energy into blaming, it tends to keep solutions from being reached," Bass said. But for Bass, the humanist message delivered earlier in the week by Australian activist Tony Trimingham was more appropriate. Four years ago, Trimingham devoted his life to lobbying for a repeal of drug laws and more compassionate drug policies after his 23-year-old son Damien died of a drug overdose. At lunch Wednesday, nearly 100 people crammed into the Carnegie Centre theatre to listen as he explained how he opened an illegal safe-injection site in 1999. It was the catalyst, he said, in forcing the state government to change its policies. Within two weeks, a legal safe-fixing site is scheduled to open in Sydney. "If the public doesn't stop seeing drug addicts as a separate society deserving no sympathy or help, then their children or friends will be the next victims," Trimingham said. It was a poignant presentation, but those Thursday night had a realpolitik reply: If taxpayers get no sympathy or help from the police and government while they, their children and their friends are victimized, they will organize and oust the politicians. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake