Pubdate: Thu, 16 Jan 2003 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Jeff Bell, Times Colonist POLICE, HEALTH CHIEFS MEET LOWE TO SWAP PARKADE CLEANUP IDEAS Three top community figures put their heads together Wednesday to address growing concerns with drug addiction and social problems in downtown Victoria. Victoria police Chief Paul Battershill and Vancouver Island Health Authority chief executive officer Rick Roger met with Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe at City Hall for about 90 minutes to ponder downtown issues including complaints about drug-related activity in the city-operated Johnson Street parkade. Lowe said specific announcements will be made at a City Hall press conference on Jan. 31. "At that time I hope to have a direction in which we will be going, and to try to look at solutions to the problem. Obviously there are some immediate issues we want to look at -- picking up needles, looking at continued enforcement and possible discussion of where and how we could create a 'sobering' centre so that we could help some of those people in need." Greater Victoria has about 1,500 to 2,000 intravenous drug users. Roger said VIHA is very interested in inner-city health care, both in Victoria and Nanaimo, and is eager to "muster our forces" to deal with the various issues that have been identified. He said the rare meeting of a leading civic official, chief of police and health executive to deal with a single topic was a valuable exercise. "There is no way that any one of those three parties could proceed on their own. This is a matter of developing a unified sense of what will work, and then trying to get everyone coalesced around the same objective." Roger said he discovered how effective such a co-operative approach was when he worked on a similar initiative while serving in a high-level position as a health executive in Vancouver. He said there is more to addressing downtown problems than having additional funding. "It would be useful to have more to invest in some of these issues, but we're mindful of the times we work in and we will redirect what we can to respond." Agencies such as the Victoria Cool Aid Society, which operates the downtown Swift Street Community Health Centre, need to be consulted in reaching solutions, he said. For Battershill, the will to examine the issues at hand from a number of angles is a good sign coming from the meeting. "We looked at environmental issues, we looked at enforcement, we looked at access to health care. We've set short timelines, and everybody is very focused on trying to get things accomplished and also keep our eye on the longer-term vision." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager