Pubdate: Fri, 16 Nov 2001 Source: Simon Fraser News (CN BC) Copyright: 2001, Simon Fraser University, Media and Public Relations Contact: http://www.sfu.ca/mediapr/sfnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1040 Author: Marianne Meadahl DRUG PROJECT'S SUCCESS LEADS TO ITS DOWNFALL A pilot project aimed at helping downtown eastside drug users to help each other stay safe had a positive effect, but too quickly exhausted the efforts of well-meaning participants. The outreach program was developed and administered by members of the Vancouver area network of drug users (VANDU), in conjunction with SFU graduate student Gordon Roe. The project grew out of Roe's research on harm reduction and outreach among intravenous drug users. The doctoral student in SFU's department of sociology and anthropology spent six months helping the group create the outreach project, then followed its progress as the organization ran it over the next six months. The goal of the VANDU health network project was to assist injection drug users to carry out harm reduction and outreach services in high-risk areas, such as rooming houses, abandoned buildings and alleys, that are inadequately served by traditional street outreach programs. After exploring several service options the group decided on a user-based needle exchange, which operated via foot patrols in the evening, from a tent on a busy corner during the day and at the project's research office located in the area. The office also operated as a drop-in and emergency shelter. "The volunteers adapted well to problems and opportunities that arose throughout the time of the project, and worked with existing programs and stakeholders as much as was possible," notes Roe, who secured a $32,500 (U.S.) Soros Harm Reduction fellowship from the U.S.-based Lindesmith Centre to assist with the project. The project succeeded in showing the value of such a user-based service, which Roe says is "a tribute to the skill and caring of the active drug users and ex-users who made most of the decisions and carried them through." Unfortunately, he concedes, "its very success was its downfall. The services grew too quickly and became too ambitious in their scope." Roe says volunteers became burnt out by the pace they set themselves and the needs they attempted to address. "The project did have limited success in integrating its activities with those of other services in the downtown eastside and in gaining recognition as a service itself," he says. "But its activities also overwhelmed the capacity of the user organization's ability to integrate and sustain them, both philosophically and financially." Roe concedes not all participants in the project are satisfied with the report and that some have been critical of its contents. Despite that Roe says members he's spoken with are generally happy with the alley patrol and needle exchange programs that were created. Roe says the project's goals were initially compatible with those of VANDU, but as it grew both in participants and scope, it began to take on new directions, not all of which were well-accepted by the group. Estimates of the number of those buying, selling and injecting cocaine and heroin in the downtown eastside range from 6,000 to 10,000. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake