Pubdate: Tue, 15 Oct 2002 Source: Surrey Now (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc., A Canwest Company Contact: http://www.thenownewspaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1462 Author: Ted Colley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) ADDICTS WONDER WHO PAYS The sky is grey and threatens rain as the addicts file in and out through the door under the pharmacy sign. The windows are blanked out with plain white paper, making it impossible to see in from the street. A few people hang around in the parking lot, a few more inside. One man is sprawled out on the floor, his back propped against a wall. His chin drops onto his chest, then jerks up again as he fights ... sleep? Everybody's there for the little paper cup filled with a small amount of methadone. The druggist pours the bright yellow liquid out of a big plastic jug and hands it through a small circular hole cut in the plexiglass partition separating him from the junkies. They drink it down and hit the road. The place calls itself a pharmacy. The city calls it a methadone dispensary and wants it gone. To help make that happen, Surrey council approved a new business licence fee for stand-alone methadone dispensaries Monday- a whopping $10,000 a year. Make 'em pay and they'll go away. Out on the street nearby, Don's hanging out. He says he's trying to kick heroin with methadone and comes here to get his medication. He seems stoned; his eyes are glazed, his speech is slurred and he's weaving back and forth a little while talking. Don says it's the cough syrup he's been taking for his cold. Don looks a little rough; like he could use a good meal and some new clothes. "If they close these guys down, it's gonna be bad for guys like me. They got methadone at the Safeway but they don't like guys like me coming in there." Maybe not, but city council doesn't like guys like him going to the stand-alones either. That's why they voted to jack up the licence fee to five figures from the $195 per year they now pay. City solicitor Craig MacFarlane's report noted at least four of the stand-alones, whose primary business is the dispensing of methadone to drug addicts, are operating in a small area of Whalley around 104th Avenue and King George Hwy. The concentration of these dispensaries and the addicts who use them, MacFarlane contends, lead to increased crime in the area, which hurts existing businesses and impedes redevelopment in Whalley. Raising the business licence fee, he said, will help pay for extra policing and discourage the opening of any new dispensaries in Surrey. Regular pharmacies won't have their licence fees increased, even though they also supply methadone to addicts. They'll be exempted from the new fee as long as they don't make methadone their top seller. Coun. Dianne Watts chairs the city's public safety committee. "We're only interested in the ones where that's all they do - dispense methadone. They claim to be pharmacies, but they don't have much else in these places. It's just individuals getting rich on the addicts," Watts said. She said there are about 10 dispensaries in Whalley and the new bylaw means no more will be allowed. When the existing ones go, Watts added, they won't be replaced. Methadone is a synthetic narcotic originally developed by the Germans during the Second World War as a morphine substitute. Its use in the treatment of heroin addicts began in the 1960s. Methadone hinders the interaction of heroin with the brain's endorphin receptors, thus blocking the drug's effect. The provincial government administers a methadone maintenance program for addicts. Victoria pays pharmacists and the dispensaries to supply the drug to addicts with a doctor's prescription. Watts lays the blame for abuses in the program squarely on the province. "There have been allegations some of these places have paid addicts to bring their prescriptions to them. Some addicts are selling their prescriptions or selling their methadone on the street. The controls on the program are very loose and they need to be tightened up. That's the provincial government's fault." The manager of another small Whalley pharmacy supplying methadone to addicts was puzzled by the city's move. Other prescription and over-the-counter medications and supplies sit on shelves lining the walls of the tiny storefront space. The manager, who asked not to be identified, said the city's got it all backward; enterprises like his are there because there's a demand, not vice versa. "The addicts don't come because I am here. I am here because the addicts are here. This is not going to help the people who need methadone. Whalley has a large population of people who need it." Watts agreed there are plenty who need help with addiction, but said there's got to be a better way. "I don't think anyone would mind a methadone clinic if it's controlled and with social programs to go with it. Surrey doesn't have a lot in the way of support services for people and the province has to do something about that," she said. Because senior governments control programs like methadone maintenance, the only way cities like Surrey can exercise control is through zoning and business licence bylaws. Watts thinks Surrey has used them to good advantage. "We've used them to control pawnshops, escort services, body rub parlours. I believe it will work here, too." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth