Pubdate: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2001 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: 1101 Baxter Rd.,Ottawa, Ontario, K2C 3M4 Fax: 613-596-8522 Website: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ Author: Dene Moore VANCOUVER SETS UP DRUG COURTS IN CITY WITH DEVASTATING PROBLEM VANCOUVER (CP) - It is noisy and crowded in the provincial court and sheriffs regularly call out the names to see who has bothered to show up. At the back of a room the sheriff rouses a young man who has fallen asleep in a chair. The young man is one of a daily parade of drug addicts that clog the provincial court in Vancouver, one of the more ugly buildings housed in one of the poorest and most drug-addled neighbourhoods in the country. But by April, 50 drug offenders at a time could be routed through a separate drug treatment court in the city, which has become as well known in recent years for its drug problem as for its mild winter weather and mountain-backed beaches. Drug addicts facing non-violent charges - trafficking, property and prostitution offences - could avoid jail time by agreeing to treatment and monitoring. "These are individuals that without a drug treatment court have no other alternative," said Toby Louie, a spokesman for British Columbia's Attorney General's office. Martha Devlin, a federal prosecutor and department director in charge of the drug court pilot project, said the details still have to be worked out. Toronto has had a drug treatment court for two years - a pilot project funded through Justice Canada's Crime Prevention Investment Fund. Non-violent drug offenders agree to mandatory drug treatment to avoid jail for federal offences. Participants must submit to weekly urine tests and attend therapy sessions. Successful participants - those who end up drug-free - receive a suspended sentence or a conditional discharge but must continue therapy while they serve out their probation. Those who fail to complete the program go back to the regular courts for sentencing. Federal Justice Minister Anne McLellan said she would like to see drug courts in all major Canadian cities by 2004. The United States opened the doors on its first drug court more than 10 years ago, and England and Australia are setting up test courts of their own. There has been one in Portland, Ore., since 1991 - the third in the country that now has over 600. "We've gone from a punishment court to a therapeutic court," said Judge Douglas Beckman, who's presided over the court for the past year and a half. "The idea is keeping people out of jail and off drugs and every effort is made to force them, cajole them, influence them to stay in treatment and stay clean." He said it has been more successful than regular criminal courts. "Nothing is done in the normal criminal justice system to change their behaviour," Beckman said. After eight years on the bench, he said authorities will never stop the flow of drugs. The only way to combat the problem is to decrease demand. "We've tried the alternative of jail and prison and it doesn't stop drug use. It has almost no impact," Beckman said in a telephone interview from Portland. "It was a revolving door, and I think kind of a waste of my time and the community's money." One recent study found that every dollar spent on the Portland drug court saves the county and state $12.50 in crime costs, enforcement fees and health care expenses. Government studies indicate that about 70 per cent of prisoners are in jail because of involvement with drugs or alcohol. "Obviously jail is no place for anybody who actually needs health care, and somebody with an addiction needs health care support," said Maxine Davis, executive director of the Dr. Peter AIDS Foundation in Vancouver. But Davis believes drug courts are an outdated, failed attempt because they are a coercive way to get people off drugs. "When it comes to this whole issue of what is the most effective way of supporting individuals who are coping with the use of illegal drugs, it seems reason goes out the window and emotion takes over," Davis said. The Dr. Peter Foundation, which provides day and residential care for people living with AIDS, would like to see safe injection sites and harm reduction strategies to keep people safe until they choose to seek treatment. When that happens the treatment services must be available, Davis said. Officials are pandering to those who oppose more controversial measures, she said. "In the end they just need to have the courage to do what they know evidence shows works," Davis said. It is believed there are more than 12,000 hardcore drug users in Vancouver, most concentrated in the downtown eastside neighbourhood. In 1999, more than 385 addicts died of overdoses in the city - a level that local health authorities consider a state of emergency. There is a six-week wait for inpatient treatment beds in Portland. In Vancouver, there are 50 people on a wait list for the emergency detox centre, while the wait for residential treatment can take months. In Toronto, it ranges from four to eight weeks. British Columbia's attorney general has said the drug court could be open in April after Ottawa committed $1.6 million over the next four years. The federal funding will provide for the cost of the court but there has been no commitment for increased treatment. Louie, of the B.C. Attorney General's office, said there will be more money, but no one has promised a dollar figure. And critics say there aren't enough treatment beds in B.C. for those already seeking treatment. Without major spending on programs, the drug court will only make the wait list longer for those who want to quit drugs without the court's involvement. Will addicts have to commit a crime to get help, they ask? Vancouver, like Toronto, will include a host of social services for participants, from housing to health care. "It is difficult to be living in a shelter, for example, and have drug use going on all around you and come to a drug court program," said Mike Naymark, a manager at the Centre for Addictions and Mental Health in Toronto. The Toronto project included money specifically for treatment and services. The drug court is an impetus for addicts to stay clean, he said. "If we can get people to stay in the program past the first few weeks or month, then they're likely going to be staying a while." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F