Pubdate: Sat, 09 Nov 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: Pete McMartin, Vancouver Sun Note: The "Vancouver Plan" was unanimously endorsed by the Canadian Federation of Municipalities as the model for all Canadian cities. A poll of Vancouverites conducted last year showed about 70 per cent support, including explicit support for the harm reduction pillar, which includes supervised consumption sites and heroin maintenance. See http://crimepreventiondrugtreatment.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) NO RIGHT, WRONG IN DRUG DEBATE From the Points Being Made From Chinatown to Kerrisdale, Whether In Support of Safe-Injection Sites or Not, What Is Clear in The Discussion Is That There Are Only Victims George Chow is an independent candidate running for Vancouver city council, and he is an oddity. He does not believe in safe-injection sites. Chow also entertains the quaint notion -- in this Age of the Universal Victim -- of personal responsibility. That is, in the case of heroin and cocaine addiction, for example, he believes that if you indulge, you must first knowingly break the law, and if you continue to indulge, you must knowingly be taking your life in your hands. There is premeditation there, he seems to be saying, and a price to pay. I know. Outdated, isn't it? Chow admits to this. "I appeal to the older folks, for some reason. Maybe my values are old-fashioned." Well, rare, anyway. In the prevalent, and opposing, view of addiction, the issue of personal responsibility takes a back seat to genetic predisposition -- that is, addicts aren't criminals, they're sick, and can't help themselves. This doesn't entirely absolve the addict of blame, but it's an argument a moralist like Chow can't win, either. It's bred in the bones. How do you fight nature? Chow, by the way, does not believe the price addicts should pay is self-inflicted death. He isn't a monster. He believes in prevention, counselling and treatment. But he doesn't believe in carte blanche. "Personal responsibility means, in this case of drug users, that they have to help themselves in order to be helped. They have to exhibit some desire to be helped. And you can't just say, 'Hey, I'm a drug addict! Help me! Feed me! Find me a job! Give me a place to sleep! Give me drugs!' "First, drug addiction is illegal, and second, it's personal choice. "But it's being turned into a health-care issue. And if it is, we better be prepared to debate the cost of it." Well, no one is, price being no object, it seems. Chow's concerns, anyway, are more geographical in nature. He is campaigning against safe-injection sites because he knows damn well where the first one will be going -- and that's right next door to his old neighbourhood of Chinatown. Chow grew up there after emigrating from Hong Kong (via China) in 1965. Now, a senior engineer with B.C. Hydro, he lives in Shaughnessy. But he's been loyal to his roots, and has served on committee after committee trying to preserve the economic integrity of Chinatown. It has been a losing battle. Most recently, he represented the Chinese Benevolent Association in its fight to stop the creation of the Health Contact Centre, a drop-in for addicts on the ground floor of the Roosevelt Hotel. It is near Main and Hastings. The CBA fought it on the grounds that Chinatown has put up with enough crap, and the neighbourhood didn't want any more services that would reinforce the addicts' hold on the area. These complaints fell on deaf ears. The centre opened to great huzzahs in December 2001, and Main and Hastings is the same zoo it always was. You can go down to Chinatown on a Saturday night -- as I did recently -- and safely shoot a cannon down its streets. You won't hit a soul, except maybe an addict. Chow and I talked about this on Wednesday afternoon in his bare-bones campaign office on Broadway. A couple of hours later, we bumped into one another again at a town-hall meeting at St. Mary's Anglican Church in Kerrisdale. The evening had been sponsored by the From Grief To Action association, a group that found its genesis among the parents of well-off west side children who ended up addicts. I was told about 100 west-side families in the group had been touched by addiction, and many parents had seen their kids killed by drugs. Founded in 1999, the group now lobbies for needle exchanges, safe-injection sites and harm reduction care. Invited to speak were the three major mayoral candidates, all of whom had declared their support for safe-injection sites in one form or another, so it wasn't a night you were likely to hear a discouraging word. Three hundred people crammed into the church's old gym to listen. George Chow stood at the back. It was a powerful evening, with several of the parents getting up and giving short descriptions of the tragedies they have had to endure -- including one woman in pearls who stood up and said at the end of her question to the candidates, simply, "And oh yes, my daughter, Alexandra, died of an overdose." The words caught in her throat. Each of the candidates promised action to varying degrees. Valerie MacLean favoured consultation with neighbourhoods before installing safe-injection sites, she said, but then said she would make them understand they were doing it for the good of the city -- by which she meant, I presume, they would get them whether they wanted them or not. Jennifer Clarke said she favoured the installation of one after careful planning (and she would later tell me she wasn't sure where, St. Paul's Hospital, possibly). Larry Campbell said he would put one in as soon as possible, and in the Downtown Eastside, where it was most needed. Campbell also said he would put one in Kerrisdale if the need was there and residents wanted it. (Right. Here we were in St. Mary's Church, where a couple of decades before, the neighbourhood tried to stop the church from building non-profit housing for -- wait for it -- senior citizens. Now, a shooting gallery? Kerrisdale may have changed in 20 years, but it hasn't changed that much.) Campbell's promise to put the site in the Downtown Eastside brought the only dissenting view of the evening, and that was from the inimitable Roderick Lewis, of the Patient Empowerment Society, representing former mental patients of Riverview hospital. Lewis, as is his wont, went off on a long ramble, and almost got thrown out. But his point was cogent: Thirty per cent of addicts in the Downtown Eastside, he said, are former mental patients -- they turn to drugs because there is nothing for them to do, and they are preyed upon by dealers. They are the real innocents in this. And you want to put a shooting gallery down there for them, instead of giving them places to live outside the hellhole? "It's madness!" Lewis shouted. He had a point. He had seen, he said, several of his own friends die of overdoses. George Chow, for his part, kept quiet. Later, in a foyer, Chow said he was moved by the parents' stories, but unchanged in his opinions of safe-injection sites. "I think it's quite unfair," he said, "for one community to have to supply all the facilities for those people of other communities whose kids have gone astray." And he, too, had a point, which is the thing about this issue: There is no right or wrong, only victims -- from those who just want to live in their neighbourhoods, to those who end up dying in them. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake