Pubdate: Tue, 15 May 2001 Source: Abbotsford Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 The Abbotsford Times Contact: http://www.abbotsfordtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1009 Author: Ed Winchester NEEDLE EXCHANGE OPPONENT SPEAKS OUT Abbotsford's intravenous drug users are turning in thousands of dirty needles every week at the nearest needle exchange in the Fraser Valley. But the program co-ordinator for Fraser Valley Connection Services in Chilliwack says Abbotsford is still years away from getting its own needle exchange program. "It's very scary for people. They only hear the negative which makes the news," says Sam Conway-Mohan. "It could take years (to establish an Abbotsford program) and how many deaths are we going to have?" Conway-Mohan says most of the opposition she's encountered has come from communities that don't have needle exchange programs. "If nobody knows what the program is about, they miss out on 84 per cent of the good stuff," she says. And in Abbotsford's case, Conway-Mohan says no needle exchange opponents have contacted her. Opponents like Marcyne Heinrichs, who took the opportunity at last Monday's city council meeting to speak out against a needle exchange for the city. "Why should taxpayers subsidize the problem rather than treat it? "Free needles facilitate the habit and the dealers reap the profits," says Heinrichs. Her visit was timed with economic development manager Jay Teichroeb's request to the city to send representatives to the Lower Mainland Municipal Association's drug strategy workshop. Mayor George Ferguson and Coun. Patricia Ross attended the May 11 meeting, held with the intention of drawing up a common municipal drug strategy. Heinrichs says she is afraid a needle exchange program in Abbotsford will lead to a takeover of the area by prostitutes, pimps and drug dealers. "I do not question the intentions of these programs. Is this about HIV? Is it really about needles or is it about drug addiction?" asks Heinrichs. For Conway-Mohan, residential needle exchange programs are the most effective, allowing drug users to stay within their own homes and comfort zones. But attempts to start a residential program in Abbotsford were quashed by her Fraser Valley advisory committee - which includes doctors from Abbotsford and Mission - over concerns for her safety. The next step would be to set up a fixed needle exchange in Abbotsford, but that would be impossible without the support of the city and its residents. She says too many misconceptions remain - like Heinrichs' argument that an Abbotsford exchange would draw drug users out of Vancouver. "There's the misconception that people believe (users) would be moving out to Abbotsford, but it hasn't happened in Chilliwack," says Conway-Mohan. She pointed out that providing clean needles to long-term drug users helps to prevent the spread of blood-borne diseases. "We're talking about stopping the spread of all these diseases to go into the other core group of the population who don't use drugs," she says. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew