Pubdate: Sun, 10 Nov 2002 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Mark Tonner, The Province Note: Const. Mark Tonner is a Vancouver police officer. His opinions aren't necessarily those of the city's police department or the police board. Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n1961/a01.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) FIX FLICK CRUCIAL ISSUE FOR MAYORALTY CANDIDATES TO FIXATE ON Hearing that Vancouver's mayoral campaign had been summed up in a wild card independent film made seeing it irresistible. Nettie Wild's movie Fix was held out as a portrayal of downtown eastside problems so compelling it was being viewed in political circles across the country. I don't know Nettie, but I do know the skids. The film is largely comprised of Vancouver addicts in action; on streets, in lanes, in meetings or at whatever they call home. Shooting up dope much of the time -- chasing veins in regions of the body dear enough to make anyone cringe. A loose story outline serves as framework: the relationship between heroin addict Dean Wilson and activist Anne Livingstone. Dean moves from fresh start to broken resolve in cycles that can't be anything but true. While Dean is unfamiliar, I do know Anne. I've suffered at her hands over the years, and have reason to feel resentment, yet she came across as a person with an overwhelmingly human cause. Her passion is undeniable. Her loyalty and support for Dean speak of a large heart, though his presence in her family home speak to at least some degree of crusader's blindness. Counterpoint was provided by VPD Sergeant Doug Lang, with commentary from police cruiser and sidewalk. The Sarge, as he is referred to, rubs elbows with a businesslike courtesy I borrow from in my own patrol repertoire. All of which -- the wretched, the pragmatic and enlightened -- have become the focal point of Vancouver's mayoral election. Mayor Philip Owen is portrayed as a man of vision, removed from power in an old-school rightist conspiracy. It would be folly to sit here and say he wasn't. The pillars: prevention, treatment, education and harm reduction, form a base upon which reclamation of people and neighbourhoods can rightly stand. Even someone pushing a block-by-block military campaign can give the nod to a 360-degree approach. Simply driving addicts out might allow business to flourish, but it assigns real people the significance of laneway garbage. Is anyone hard-headed enough to come right out with that? Not this keyboard cowboy-- and not out of political self-protection. I say bring the pillars on, whoever holds the reins. Bring something on. Something other than time spent in discussion, while people die and a city achieves international notoriety for its inability to decide. Bring us all of the pillars while you're at it, please -- not the single stilt of needles-for-all, or the two-legged table of needles and education. The geometry is simple: even three of four would provide a platform, but for this to work, for the structure to weather a storm, we'll need all four. Fix is a great heads-up, for those who haven't seen the reality. It's artistic enough, ably produced and scripted, though the Odd Squad's Through a Blue Lens eclipses it for heart and insight. I had a hard time sitting all the way through, for unexpected reasons. With so much live footage, Fix was a lot like being at work for an officer with a downtown Eastside background. Not boring, and definitely worth checking out. I'll assume the mayoral candidates have seen it, and I'll wish them all well. May the best one win, and step right to the plate. Const. Mark Tonner is a Vancouver police officer. His opinions aren't necessarily those of the city's police department or the police board. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D