Pubdate: Wed, 10 Jul 2002 Source: Maple Ridge News (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Maple Ridge News Contact: http://www.mapleridgenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1328 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) TREATMENT CENTRE This is the fourth in a series about how the disappearance of 54 women from the Vancouver's eastside is touching the lives of local people Val Hughes is considering a cell phone inplant, she said jokingly. Since this series of articles started to appear in the newspaper, her phone has been ringing almost non-stop - most calls being an offer to help the Missing Women's Trust Fund. Following Hughes' plea this weekend for help in finding a large facility for a residential women's detox and rehabilitation centre, she's received several calls and at least two options that are being researched: a 16-acre camp in Maple Ridge and an eight-bedroom home in Pitt Meadows. 'We're so touched. It's just so incredible to know that people are thinking about us,' said Hughes, whose sister Kerry is missing. The 20-person rehab centre that she and other family members are working to develop will be different from any of the traditional facilities, Hughes said. It will be a centre where women spend a minimum of one year, and go through various levels of counselling with their family or significant others. 'We want to keep families together,' she said. 'The idea is that they come out together and go into their new life together.' The first three months at the centre will be dedicated to detox and restoration of basic health for the women, Hughes said. The next six months is focused on giving the women personal skills, rebuilding self-esteem and helping the addicts to trust the world and themselves again. The last three to six months is spent focusing on re-entry skills, including life skills and job training with support from the business community. Once the women are discharged, they are still required to participate in outreach programs and Hughes said the goal will also be to offer in-home support. 'We don't want to be a Bandaid,' Hughes said. 'It's critical we help the whole woman and give them tools they need to survive.' Down the road, members of the Missing Women's Trust Fund want to develop a relationship with the judiciary where young girls (12-19 year olds who are already addicted and working the streets to support their habit) can be ordered by the courts to participate in the rehabilitation program. 'This is about surviving. It's about actually saving lives,' said Dorothy Purcell, a member of MWTF, who lost her daughter Tanya Holyk in October 1996 and is active in setting up a centre. Many of the family members believe such a treatment centre could have help saved the lives of their loved-ones. In the final installment on Saturday, read about another local woman who has been searching for her sister since June 1997, and is credited with keeping media attention focused on the cases. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom