Pubdate: Wed, 16 Apr 2003 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Susan Martinuk BETTER TO PROVIDE EASY ACCESS TO TREATMENT THAN TO DRUGS Drug addicts and dealers have had free reign in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside for too long. Drug deals occur near the police department's headquarters and in open view of the public. The area is the epitome of Skid Road; a criminal, medical, social mess. So city police took steps to reclaim the area by launching a three-month trial of "enhanced enforcement" that triples the number of officers in the area. Police say they took steps because there has been much talk, but little done to install the four-pillar plan (enforcement, treatment, harm reduction and prevention). In the midst of inaction, the drug market was growing, as was embarrassment over the city's reputation. Believe it or not, this 'crackdown' on crime (enforcing the law) is considered controversial by some. City council unanimously refused to provide the VPD $2.3 million to extend the program. One advocate claimed the added police presence was "killing"people (rather than the drugs); others said it will force users into 'unsafe' injection practices, hiding and crime. The non-users seem to welcome the added police presence. It's only drug-users and their radical advocates who think law enforcement, not drugs, are at the root of the problem. They say officers are throwing 'sick' users in jail and using legal tools to deal with a medical problem. In truth, the legal battle against drugs hasn't even begun. Const. Gerry Wickstead compiled statistics that show only four per cent of drug possession charges in B.C. in 2000 resulted in a jail term. A mere one per cent of trafficking charges resulted in a prison sentence. Of roughly 15,000 injection users in B.C., only 5.5 per cent have been charged with possession. The average sentence for possession in Canada is 15 days; trafficking, 90 days. Contrast that to Washington state, where a first time trafficker faces 21 to 27 months in jail. That's enforcement. Little wonder that a drug dealer testifying at a recent trial said B.C.'s drug laws only encouraged trafficking. It's clear the VPD sees the drug problem as a major crime issue and is committed to increased enforcement. That much is positive. But it won't make any difference if the judicial system refuses to penalize drug-related offences. Lenience not only creates the perception that enforcement is a "joke," it keeps the drug user in squalor and despair. Not only must sentencing be tougher -- it must also be smarter, more meaningful. Users and dealers should be given a choice between jail or treatment; that means money for detox and treatment centres, counselling, and follow-up programs. Al Arsenault of The Odd Squad, Vancouver officers dedicated to drug prevention, says, "We have to stop making addicts lives so comfortable as to take away any impetus for them to change, but we also have to give them somewhere positive to go." We give away millions of needles yearly, are planning injection sites, the decriminalization of marijuana and perhaps even prescribing heroin and cocaine to addicts. Instead of providing easy access to drugs, why not try enforcement, meaningful sentencing that provides incentives to seek treatment, and access to treatment programs? Enhanced enforcement isn't a fix. It's a start towards controlling drugs and reclaiming the eastside. Hopefully, it will hasten the provision of effective treatment and prevention programs. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens