Pubdate: Wed, 12 May 2004 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Glenn Bohn, With File From Frances Bula Cited: http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/170/10/1551 POLICE: DRUG MARKET DOWN DRAMATICALLY POLICE Deputy Chief Decries Report That Says Crackdown Hasn't Affected Drug Use VANCOUVER - A senior Vancouver police officer has defended a one-year police crackdown on Downtown Eastside drug dealing, saying it has dramatically reduced the open drug market at Hastings and Main. According to researchers at the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, interviews with drug addicts before and after the enforcement initiative began in April 2003, showed the percentage of people using heroin or cocaine remained almost unchanged. Their study, published Tuesday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, found that adding 40 officers in the city's poorest neighbourhood has also had no direct, measurable impact on the price or availability of the illegal hard drugs. Instead, the researchers concluded, the crackdown has dispersed drug dealing across a much wider area of the Downtown Eastside, which has the potential to attract new drug users and to increase infection rates for HIV and other blood-borne diseases that addicts spread when they share needles. But Vancouver police Deputy Chief Bob Rich said police have made the streets safer for the 10,000 residents of the Downtown Eastside who don't use drugs but have to live with drug-related violence. "If our goal was to reduce the amount of drugs used by longtime intravenous drug users who live in the Downtown Eastside, we would have to admit that we failed," Rich told journalists at police headquarters. "I could also say, a little lightly, if our goal had been to find Jimmy Hoffa [the long-missing U.S. Teamsters union leader whose body has never been found] in the Downtown Eastside, we would also have to admit we failed." "But neither one of those things were our goal. Our goal was to restore order to a community in crisis, and that's what we've done." Rich offered no new facts to substantiate that assertion, but said police information on the number of violent and disorderly incidents on the street will form part of another study to be released at the end of May. He also said fewer "drug tourists" from other cities or provinces are coming to Vancouver to buy and use drugs. When the crackdown began a year ago, one of the agencies that distributes sterile hypodermic needles to addicts to slow the spread of blood-borne diseases like AIDS and hepatitis began collecting used needles from addicts they hadn't seen in years. Judy McGuire, executive director of the Downtown Eastside Youth Activities Society, said that before the crackdown, those longtime addicts used to remain locked in their hotel rooms when evening came, because they were afraid to go out on the street. "The level of victimization, violence and dealing on the street all went down," McGuire said. On the other hand, DEYAS vans began spending more time in other city neighbourhoods collecting used needles, because McGuire said more drug users and traffickers had moved to areas such as the south downtown, the West End and Commercial Drive neighbourhoods. "You simply had to read the news or talk to residents or people who owned businesses in those areas to know that for them, the situation has gotten worse," she said. "Some of it has dispersed in the city. Some has dispersed to other parts of the Lower Mainland, to Burnaby, New Westminster or Surrey. It's always been a fairly mobile population, and the dealers will move wherever they think their customers are." Former Vancouver mayor Philip Owen, who helped develop Vancouver's "four-pillar" approach to drug problems, said he was disappointed the study gave the impression no progress has been made in the Downtown Eastside. "Everyone says that in the last three months, the last six months, it's been a lot better there." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin