Pubdate: Thu, 07 Aug 2003 Source: Monday Magazine (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Monday Publications Contact: http://mondaymag.com/monday/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1150 Author: Adrienne Mercer SOLID CHANGES AT DRUG ORGANIZATION With the drop-in centre at 2155 Dowler Place closed for good, the Society of Living Intravenous Drug Users is back to relying on posters and volunteer street outreach to help people battling addiction. In the past month, the society has revamped its board of directors, and members are focused on finding funding to keep the group up and running. "The guiding goals, I think for SOLID are still there," says new board member Gordon Harper. "There is a need to create a way in which folks who use substances can have a voice, and have a place at tables where they haven't been at before." The advocacy group--modeled after the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users--formed in March, shortly after the successful Victoria run of Nettie Wild's documentary FIX: The Story of an Addicted City. On June 4, former SOLID president Garth Perry opened the drop-in centre. The idea was to give users a place to access services or simply get off the streets. Unfortunately, says Harper, opening the centre was just too much, too quickly. Perry has since left the group, and could not be contacted by press time. "Garth wanted to do the right thing, but he wanted to do it faster than others [did]," says Harper. "Garth has vanished . . . I want to commend him for the complete commitment of time and energy and focus it took to get [SOLID] off the ground . . . I think he found himself in a situation kind of like an avalanche." Harper says board member Michel Breton, who has years of previous experience as a street outreach worker, has been keeping SOLID's needle exchange and street outreach going. "He's kind of being SOLID at the moment," Harper says. Breton says it's been tough on the group to close the drop-in centre, because people were beginning to depend on it, and trusted that it would be available to them. "We were not ready, and we were not staffed properly with enough volunteers," he says. "And the rent wasn't paid for July, so we had to close. It hurt SOLID . . . people are angry that we withdrew that service." Breton says the next step for the group is to build trust with the community, and seek out funding so volunteers can continue with street outreach. "We don't have a base . . . we don't have a phone," he says. "We're in the red . . . I'm hoping to set up at least a contact phone number with a mailbox. And we need a place, even if it's just a closet for [storing] supplies." SOLID meetings still happen at 7 p.m. every Wednesday, at 926 View Street. Breton says board members are thinking of changing the group's logo--currently, it's a skull--and possibly even its name. "We don't want to alienate people who smoke crack or use other non-intravenous drugs," he says. SOLID is also starting to work more closely with other support service agencies in the city. Councillor Charlayne Thornton-Joe says she's glad to see SOLID "reaching out to other community partners," and says while she can't speak on behalf of the city, she personally thinks the changes the SOLID board is making are good ones. "It isn't something we've discussed [at council meetings]" she says. "But I think . . . working with community partners is a positive movement." Harper says SOLID board members and the community the group serves just need to be patient. "Getting our feet under us is the first order of business--and then, just seeing how best we can serve the people we're intended to serve," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake