Pubdate: Thu, 19 Sep 2002 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Pamela Fayerman, Vancouver Sun EASTSIDE NEEDS DETOX, NOT ARRESTS: DRUG COP City's Top Enforcement Officer Cites Failure Of Drug Laws Against Law Of Supply And Demand Vancouver's top drug cop says it often seems hopeless trying to cut off the supply of illicit drugs when trafficking is as profitable as it is, so finding ways to prevent and treat addiction is the best hope for the Downtown Eastside. "We can not arrest our way out of the drug problem," Inspector Kash Heed told participants Wednesday at a two-day symposium exploring ways to handle the city's drug problem. In his tongue-in-cheek assessment of the drug business, Heed, commanding officer of the police department's vice and drug section, said if the drug industry was not illegal, there would be much to admire about it. "To start, it is highly profitable. It produces goods for a small fraction of the price its customers are willing to pay. It clearly takes advantage of the globalization of the economy and skillfully responds to changing markets and distribution routes. "It is global, but dispersed, built on a high level of trust, marketing its wares to the young without spending anything on conventional advertising. It brings rewards to some poorer countries and employs many of the world's disadvantaged and unskilled. Unfortunately, I am not talking about Nike. I'm describing the world's drug industry." To illustrate how profitable the drug trade is, Heed said the price paid to a Pakistani farmer growing opium is $90 a kilo. When it gets to North America, the wholesale price is $80,000 a kilo, and on the street, with purity diluted by half, the retail price is $290,000 a kilo. Heed said many police leaders are reluctant to discuss such issues and they worry about losing the power to arrest people should Canada's drug laws become more liberal. "Any police leader who advocates more liberal drug laws or approaches risks being pictured as favouring drug use," he said. While drug abuse wrecks lives and health and fuels crime, Heed said cutting off the supply often seems hopeless because there is always another dealer to fill the gap from the one who gets busted. "Our priority is to stop the threats to public order and safety," he said, noting that despite the best intentions of law enforcement agencies, nothing has worked to reduce supply and demand. He estimates that 5,000 of the city's hardest drug addicts commit half the crimes in the downtown area. Like most other speakers at the symposium at Simon Fraser University's Morris Wosk Centre for Dialogue, Heed agreed more emphasis should be placed on health services for addicts and treatment resources for detoxification. "Asking an addict to be patient and wait for an available slot for detoxification and treatment is simply a waste of time," he said. "The crisis will pass and the addict will simply pick up their usual habits. The opportunity to intervene will be lost and the addict will view the system as useless and ineffective," Heed said. While Vancouver's future drug strategy has focused on such things as safe injection sites and heroin by prescription, Dr. Michael O'Shaughnessy, director of the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, based at St. Paul's Hospital, said there is still a paucity of scientific study to show whether such strategies will have a positive effect. A Swiss study on a heroin and methadone replacement program showed positive results but did so with poor scientific design, and a Dutch study has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal, he said. In his presentation, Evan Wood, a researcher in O'Shaughnessy's program, said making safe injection sites available would likely control health care costs by reducing infectious disease and overdoses. Wood's sobering synopsis of the effects of the Downtown Eastside drug problem showed that: - - There are several hundred overdose deaths a year; - - The lifetime medical costs associated with treating each case of HIV infection among drug users is $150,000 - - About $300,000 is spent annually on ambulances transporting overdose patients to hospital; - - 82 per cent of the money spent on B.C.'s drug problem is for law enforcement efforts, leaving only a small portion for treatment and prevention; - - Funding to cover police working in the Downtown Eastside has increased from $6.7 million in 1995 to $11.2 million in 2001. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D