Pubdate: Thu, 30 Jan 2003 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Pete McMartin, Vancouver Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) WHALLEY REPRESENTS THE OTHER DRUG STRATEGY While Vancouver Is Empowering Its Addicts, Surrey Is Trying To Get Rid Of Drugs. Which City Is Right? Mayor Bob McCallum, the White Knight of Whalley, is standing in the middle of a street, posing for the cameras. It is raining something awful. McCallum ignores the rain and smiles. Click, go the cameras. Click click. The street is 135A, which, for some reason I am not quite sure of, has become (a) Ground Zero for the Mayor's War on Drugs and (b) linked with the rash of brutal home invasions of seniors' homes in Whalley. This isn't a link McCallum has himself encouraged, because he recognizes that the home-invader might simply be a run-of-the-mill psycho and not a drug addict, but he isn't shy of taking advantage of it politically, either. And so he here is, at my request, standing in the rain. There are at least three television crews on the street, and several reporters, and several weird-looking people skulking around, and a guy pushing a grocery cart full of bottles and cans, and a neighbour walking two large pit bulls -- off leash -- if that tells you anything about 135A. This is a street that needs a muzzle. Which McCallum is hoping to provide. Behind McCallum in the middle of the street is a concrete barrier. It cuts the street in half. McCallum had it put there to dissuade the street-racers, hookers, pimps, johns, junkies and crack addicts that bedevil 135A, but at the moment of our interview, all it was dissuading was the progress of a big guy named Bob in a pick-up truck who had just come from an auto-wrecking company on 135A. Bob, solid citizen, drives up, looks at the barrier with disgust and says, within earshot of the television crews surrounding McCallum: "What's this s--- supposed to accomplish?" Well, Bob, McCallum might have said if he hadn't been basking in the glow of television cameras, that remains to be seen. The grimy little stretch of 135A has become the mayor's centrepiece in his grand experiment -- an experiment meant to stem, and even quash, the persistent, corrosive existence of hard drugs in Whalley. The home invasions? They're a corollary to what McCallum is doing on 135A, albeit an emotional one. Get rid of the drugs, he reasons, and you get rid of a lot of Whalley's problems. This sounds like logic at its simplest, but in the Lower Mainland it constitutes a radical departure from the accepted and more liberal modes of dealing with the drug culture. In Vancouver, which, for good or ill, now leads the way in Canada, the city government isn't putting up roadblocks to junkies -- it's empowering them. It has, in effect, waved the white flag, saying here, here's a safe-injection site, here's social housing, here's a neighbourhood of social services you can call your own. Just don't kill yourself or anybody else. And who knows? Maybe it will work. Mayor Larry Campbell has three years to prove it. McCallum is taking a different tack. Surrey differs from Vancouver in two important ways, he says: "We don't believe in harm reduction, and we don't believe in safe-injection sites." McCallum is putting the onus of responsibility on the junkies -- if you want help, we'll give it to you -- but in the meantime, he intends to make things as uncomfortable for them as he can. He has hired more cops and firemen, has sicced his bylaw boys on derelict houses and, borrowing a page from former New York mayor Rudolf Guiliani's Broken Window philosophy, has warned businesses on 135A that any graffiti must be cleaned up within 24 hours. The street itself has been cleaned up, and has been repaved and given new sidewalks and curbs. He hopes cosmetics, to some extent, can be the cure. A particular target of McCallum's ire has been the needle exchange in the the South Fraser Community Services building. The SFCS building, which is in the middle of the block, offers several social services besides the needle exchange, including a food bank and medical clinic. Next door to it there used to stand a crack house. It is now a vacant lot, the city having just recently torn it down. So far, the city has torn down five such houses on the block, leaving its landscape as gap-toothed as a junkie's mouth. McCallum saw the existence of such houses as evidence of the needle exchange's pernicious influence on the area. He believes it acts as a magnet to addicts. "It's our only needle exchange in Surrey and it concentrates all the people with drug problems in this area. Vancouver had the same problem with a centralized needle exchange, so they decentralized. And that's what we want. We've asked (the needle exchange) to leave and relocate into our health units around the city and decentralize." The folks at the needle exchange, however, don't happen to see things that way, and say they aren't about to leave. Program director Linda Syssoloff told me that most of her clientele don't actually live in the area, but drive in, get their needles and leave. She also said most of her clients are heroin addicts, while the people you see wandering the streets around 135A are crack cocaine addicts. McCallum doesn't buy that argument and, in earlier interviews, threatened to shut the needle exchange down if it didn't comply with his request. It isn't clear how he might do that. The SFCS is funded by the provincial government and the politician responsible for the needle exchange, Surrey-Panorama Liberal MLA Dr. Gulzar Cheema, the minister of state for mental health, told the Surrey Leader the exchange "isn't going anywhere." Where this leaves McCallum is, well, in the same position Vancouver's Mayor Larry Campbell is in -- which, for the moment, is in limbo. He is giving his plan at least a year and proposes to take it one block at a time, coordinating all the forces the city of Surrey can bring to bear upon the problem. Watching on the sidelines will be the constituents of both cities, to see which of the two great experiments will work. If McCallum's does, and he eradicates or lessens the drug problem in Whalley, can you imagine how the long-suffering citizens of Vancouver might feel as they regard the hundreds of millions of tax dollars being poured into the Downtown Eastside? - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager