Pubdate: Sun, 09 Nov 2003 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Kelly Cryderman RECOVERING ADDICT CALLS SPADY CENTRE HOME FOR 3 YEARS No Housing Available For City's Social Misfits EDMONTON - Dwight Schultz has no qualms about admitting his faults. He's a recovering heroin addict, he's been in jail nine times for stealing and he doesn't have what it takes to make it in this world. "I have no coping skills," Schultz said. "I can't handle arguments, I can't handle abuse, I can't handle rejection, I can't handle poverty and I can't handle loneliness." The 40-year-old had a run-in with Edmonton police Saturday morning when he was found with two silver cases filled with expensive industrial tools. Schultz said they were hidden by another homeless person and he found them. Police took the goods and let him go. "I wander," he said afterwards. "My family don't want me at home and I don't really have any friends. "The friends I do have, I don't really want to hang out with. So I stick to myself and I just wander around and look for places to eat and hopefully get into the (George Spady Centre) every night." After three decades of drug use and going in and out of shelters and rehab programs, Schultz said he has difficulty with the way different levels of government deal with the problems of homelessness and drug addiction. "I think they should do what they do over in Amsterdam. They should just give us our drugs," he said. "They should have a clinic where we can go . . . if you're a cocaine addict, you should be able to come in and get your cocaine." The logic to Schultz is obvious. "Nobody will steal anymore. Nobody will wreck anything anymore. Our jails will empty and our hospitals will empty," he said. "These people are going to do it anyways till they're dead. If the government did something like that, they'd just cheer the government right on and it's the last you'd hear of them." Schultz is thin and can't remember where he got a small wound on the top of his head. But he said he hasn't used heroin for five months and methadone keeps him steady. He has been staying at the George Spady Centre for three years, but he said there are at least 30 to 60 people in downtown Edmonton who don't get a shelter bed each night. With the cold weather, Schultz worries for those who don't have a place to stay. "It's terrible," he said. They go to "stairwells, anyplace that's warm. "There's a few other people that have a couple other places that they wouldn't divulge that are a little warmer than stairwells. "Most people have blankets or sleeping bags and they carry them with them and they get in a stairwell and they jump in the sleeping bag and they sleep." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin