Pubdate: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 Source: Peak, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 Peak Publications Society Contact: 8888 University Dr., Burnaby, B.C. V5A 1S6 Canada Feedback: http://www.peak.sfu.ca/Feedback.HTML Website: http://www.peak.sfu.ca/ Author: Alexander Dobuzinskis, Associate Staff Writer RESIDENTS REQUEST EXPANDED HEALTH SERVICES FOR DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE DRUG ADDICTS In a series of public hearings held last week, members of the Vancouver Development Permit Board were asked by government officials and a dynamic group of concerned citizens to approve plans for expanded health services targeted towards drug addicts in the Downtown Eastside. The Vancouver/Richmond Health Board believes these initiatives will help combat the area's large HIV and hepatitis C infection rates, which are among the highest in North America. The health board made five applications to the Permit Board, the most controversial being a proposal to open a 24-hour health contact centre on the first floor of the Roosevelt Hotel, at 166 E. Hastings Street. Critics contend that the city is inviting trouble by keeping such a facility open all night, and that it will attract drug users from other parts of the city, as well as dealers. Some members of the municipal government have also expressed fear that the Vancouver/Richmond Health Board's own facilities may turn into safe injection sites. "I suggest that if this contact centre were to become a safe injection site, the centre should be closed," said Jeff Brooks, director of social planning for Vancouver. The Vancouver/Richmond Health Board has maintained that the contact centre must be open 24-hours a day so that police will have somewhere to refer people who need to get off the street. The Vancouver Police Department has supported the application for the development of the contact centre. Another service to be provided by the contact centre will be a washroom facility, since there is currently a severe shortage of public washrooms in the area. Last week's public hearings drew over 200 attendants per session, and at times the forum became emotionally charged, as health care workers, former drug addicts, and parents of drug addicts stepped forward to relate their experiences and ask the Permit Board to approve the health board's applications. However, many speakers owning businesses in the area accused the city of fostering a drug culture in the Downtown Eastside by providing too many services for drug addicts. Business owner Angela Giannoulis pointed to the City of Vancouver's own estimation that 40 per cent of drug users that congregate in the community live somewhere other than the Downtown Eastside. For its part, the health board claims that the applications currently submitted constitute a bare minimum of the health services needed in the community. Other supporters of the proposals say that the government's drug plan must go much further than simply providing primary care to addicts. "This is only the beginning," Liberal MP Libby Davies told the Permit Board on Monday. Along with the application to set up the health contact centre, the health board is looking to establish a LifeSkills Centre at 401 E. Cordova, to expand two existing drug treatment facilities, and to redesign the public space at the corner of Main and Hastings in order to make it more difficult for drug dealers to operate there. In recent years the "problems" of the Downtown Eastside have garnered much attention from the media and academics. Gordon Roe, an SFU doctoral student in anthropology, recently ran a research centre in association with the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users (VANDU) at the New World Hotel on Dunleavy Street. Roe and his co-workers used the facility to welcome addicts in off the streets and to ensure that addicts' civil rights were being upheld in the neighbourhood. The program encountered a major stumbling block in January of this year, however, when VANDU was evicted by its landlord. One of the complaints against VANDU was that they let addicts use the building's washrooms. "People automatically assume that if there's a bathroom and there happens to be a drug user in it then it's a safe injection site," says Roe. The public hearings will resume Tuesday February 26 at Vancouver's Plaza Hotel. At the start of the hearings 720 individuals had signed up to speak, and this Tuesday will start with speaker number 656. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake