Pubdate: Fri, 03 Oct 2003 Source: Goldstream Gazette (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Goldstream Gazette Contact: http://www.goldstreamgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1291 CAPITAL DOESN'T NEED INJECTION SITE Do we really need a safe-injection site in downtown Victoria? Or in Saanich or Victoria West or Esquimalt? A visit by two Capital Region MLAs and Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe to the newly-opened safe-injection site on Vancouver's downtown eastside left all three agreeing that Victoria's intravenous drug use problems don't yet warrant building a similar type of facility here. It's clear that Greater Victoria isn't at the point where addicts are dying right and left in the same numbers as those in the most troubled region of our larger neighbour across the water. Victoria-Beacon Hill MLA Jeff Bray, a former social worker who spent time working in Vancouver, referred to the eastside as a "melting pot of misery" and a place that is "indescribably terrible" for the way people seem to have little or no hope of improving their lot in life. We believe he hit the mark when he stated that what Victorians would consider the "worst Friday night imaginable" when it comes to drug-related activity here is the equivalent of "10:00 every morning" on Vancouver's eastside. That may be true. But at the same time, we can't ignore the fact that about 2,000 people in the region are confirmed users and need help. Talk to street nurses or people involved with the Outreach Services Clinic in Fernwood or the local IV drug users support group, for example, and you'll hear that people are still using in back alleys or doorways under unsanitary and often unsafe conditions in the Capital Region. It's all a matter of scale. Where the scale of the problem is unquestionably large in Vancouver, it is less clear just how many people have died in circumstances related to fixing in Victoria. Today we are very much living in a province where the bottom line is the bottom line, and numbers mean everything to those in power. That means unless the situation gets drastically worse around the Capital Region - as in more people overdosing and even dying - it's unlikely that much more money will be spent on tackling the problem of IV drug addiction, let alone creating a safe haven for those who do use. The City of Victoria's Downtown Action Plan, unveiled by Lowe and representatives of the Vancouver Island Health Authority last January, called for the creation of a $1 million sobering centre to help with the treatment of local addicts and alcoholics. Such a centre, which will without a doubt help provide guidance toward accepting help and perhaps even peel some people away from the destructive path that is drug addiction, is much needed. The key will be getting people to use it, once in operation. Essentially, Vancouver's safe injection site is a last-ditch effort by a desperate community to try and save some of the lives of people who have fallen deep into the trap of IV drug addiction. We agree that Greater Victoria needs facilities to help people who are at the end of their rope and are at risk of overdosing. But spending large amounts of money on what seems to be a stopgap measure is not the way to go here. Rather, continued improvements need to be made in the area of outreach services, where addicts can be helped where they are, which is downtown in many cases. The time to save lives is to catch people before they get too far down the road to despair. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens