Pubdate: Fri, 31 Oct 2003 Source: Kelowna Capital News (CN BC) Copyright: 2003, West Partners Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.kelownacapnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1294 Author: John McDonald, staff reporter Cited: Four Pillars Drug Strategy http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/fourpillars/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Downtown+Eastside Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Four+Pillar PUBLIC FORUM ON DRUG ABUSE YOUR CHANCE TO GET INFORMED If you want to know just how fast a major social problem can manifest itself in a community, just ask the people of Vancouver. In 10 short years, the Downtown Eastside went from a neighbourhood of down-and-outs to an out-and-out IV drug shooting gallery. There's been serious drug use in that part of Vancouver for decades but it largely went on behind closed doors, mostly out of sight and out of mind. When I left there in 1993, the city was experiencing a major epidemic of overdose deaths, 300 that year-almost one a day. That death rate has stayed stubbornly high since then as cheap heroin and cocaine has flooded the streets. And the junkies themselves have taken to the streets. No more shooting up behind closed doors, the action is going on in full public view almost as a cry for help. The epidemic of drug use there has become political, deciding the fate of former mayor, Philip Owen, and the current mayor, Larry Campbell. Owen was tossed by his own party for daring to talk about doing something about the epidemic and Campbell was elected as someone who would do more than just talk. He endorsed the city's (indeed, country's) first legal safe injection site opened just last month amidst much controversy. If anyone in Kelowna thinks our own city is immune to a drug abuse epidemic of our own, think again. Kelowna is a place where people want to be, and though try as some might to reduce junkies to something less than human, they are people too with many of the same reasons for wanting to live here. Mayor Walter Gray is to be lauded for trying to bring the subject to the fore by hosting a public forum on addiction next month in Kelowna. If nothing else, he is a canny politician, one who knows which way the wind blows and in the case of IV drug use, it blows in from Vancouver. Both Owen and Campbell are champions of the Four Pillar approach which uses equal parts education, harm reduction, treatment and enforcement. Next month's forum will focus on how Kelowna can adapt them to our own unique situation. Like it or not, Kelowna has a drug problem. And as they say, you can be part of the problem or you can be part of the solution. I urge everyone to find the time to make it to the public forum on addictions Nov. 26 at the Rotary Centre. If you don't, you give up your right to bitch the next time you step over a used syringe lying on the street. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake