Pubdate: Thu, 03 Apr 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 DRUG USERS ORGANIZE, SERVICES DISCUSSED Policing alone won't eliminate drug addiction in Victoria--that much has long been clear to advocates for drug users. But given the challenge of finding money for long-term care strategies, policing is currently the only visible part of Victoria's downtown action plan. Still, says Gordon Harper, the plan that representatives of the Victoria police, city council and Vancouver Island Health Authority announced on January 31 has changed the public's perception of addicts and addiction. So has Nettie Wild's documentary FIX: The Story of an Addicted City, which showed at the Cineplex Odeon for three weeks during February and March. "There is a group of people [in this city] who over time have been denied services, who have been told `no'," says Harper, longtime board chair of the Greater Victoria Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Society, which officially amalgamated with the Vancouver Island Health Authority on Monday this week. "What people didn't understand about substance use is once [users] are addicted, it isn't a `lifestyle choice' anymore. The action plan and FIX have put a human face on addiction." AIDS Vancouver Island spokesperson Erik Ages agrees. "Decision-makers in the community are working faster than I've ever seen them work, and with a spirit that will get results for everybody," he says. "The most important thing is that spirit of cooperation . . . now people believe they can fix the situation. They don't see it as an impossibility." Harper says it makes sense that increased policing is the biggest change on the streets since January 31, because there isn't funding yet for an adult sobering centre or an expanded youth detox facility. "The enforcement leg is the only one that is controlled by municipal government," Harper says. "Lots of folks in the addictions community are uncomfortable with it--we're dealing with day-to-day, life and death issues, not public nuisance issues. Most of the low-level dealers are addicted themselves, and they deal to support their own addictions . . . the next piece of the action, which is more services, and engaging people with information about treatment options, that's lagging behind because there isn't the money." While the city and VIHA look for funds, a collective of Victoria drug users is preparing to push for change. On the first Thursday in March, Victoria's Society of Live Injection Drug Users (SOLID) had its inaugural meeting, and society president Garth Perry says about 30 users and supporters continue to meet each week. The society modeled itself after the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, the organization Wild focused on in FIX. "It's been really organic," Perry says. "I haven't had to force it. It's been more and more and more people every week, and we're getting a lot of community support too." Ultimately, SOLID members want existing services improved, and they hope the city and VIHA will eventually back a safe injection site. For now, Perry says he wants to build the collective, and familiarize the larger community with the issues that injection drug users face. "We plan to start attending council and police board meetings in the future," he says. "Right now, we want [SOLID members] to feel safe, supported, not judged." Harper says with SOLID, users can provide a clear sense of what users need, want and think. "The hoops that folks have to jump through just to stay alive, it's amazing," he says. "You wake up in the morning and you know you have to go through the same hell you went through yesterday. There are no days off for addicted people." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens