Pubdate: Wed, 25 Aug 2004 Source: Whitehorse Star (CN YK) Copyright: 2004 Whitehorse Star Contact: http://www.whitehorsestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1493 Author: Sarah Elizabeth Brown RESIDENTS FEEL A THREAT TOO, HARDY SAYS The MLA tackling the downtown core's drug problem has received threats to cease and desist. Earlier this summer, Whitehorse Centre MLA Todd Hardy called a constituency meeting for late July to talk about the riding's drug situation. Residents in the area, concerned about 24-hour traffic and used needles stemming from nearby drug houses, had approached Hardy about the problem. "It was indicated to me maybe I shouldn't be involved in this," Hardy said in an interview this morning of the threats he received before the first meeting. "I took it to a certain degree as a threat." While he declined to go into more detail, he's not surprised to be getting threats. "Any time you enter that world, you are often entering a world of violence," the longtime social activist and politician said. "A lot of people make a lot of money off drugs. "I wasn't overly surprised -- I have some understanding of the nature of drug use," said the Yukon NDP leader. Approximately 100 residents, professionals and police officers showed up July 28 to talk about the problem and hear how a Vancouver Downtown Eastside Member of Parliament took on the issue in her neighbourhood. Hardy promised a second meeting. At the first one, two hours went by with more people still keen to talk. A second meeting is set for Sept. 8. The violence, crime and threats that go along with drug selling and use are a daily reality for downtown residents who live close to houses where drugs are sold, said Hardy. If the end result of the increased public interest in Whitehorse's drug situation means addicts can get the help they need to kick their addictions, "they you should do it -- not just do politics that are nice," Hardy said. The MLA himself lives a half-block from a home where one drug dealer lost a finger to another dealer, who cut it off with a meat cleaver, over a drug debt. In that case, the injured man was first beaten with a baseball bat and given cuts to the face with the cleaver before he was forced to spread his fingers on a table. As well, said Hardy, there have been violent deaths and overdoses in the downtown area over the years directly related to the drug trade. He's no hero, said Hardy, and he's just one of many people who face the drug trade when they step out their front doors. "People in my riding live with that threat daily," he said. "They feel as much threat as I do. "I can't with any clear conscience represent the residents of the downtown riding and turn a blind eye to what's happening in the area." Libby Davies, the MP who represents Vancouver's Downtown Eastside residents, a poverty-stricken and drug-riddled neighbourhood, spoke at the July 28 Whitehorse meeting about Vancouver's efforts to take on the myriad aspects of addictions and their effects. She'd been told by politicians of every stripe and level not to take on the issue because it was personally dangerous and political suicide, said Hardy. Davies was at meetings where cops, business owners and drug users screamed at each other, and at her, and threatened to ruin her career. "She said it took years off her life," said Hardy. "I take my hat off to her." Davies was a crucial member of those who pushed the Four Pillar approach, encompassing not only police enforcement, but education and prevention, treatment and harm reduction. The last pillar, which includes safe injection sites, has been particularly contentious. Davies told Whitehorse residents some areas are farther ahead than others, but real progress has been made in a community with a problem that far outstrips that of Whitehorse. At the end of the first drug forum last month, Hardy suggested a rekindling of a Downtown Community Association. A group called the Oldtown Coalition has started up in the past when an issue arose that required a community group, but Hardy believes a permanent association is needed. So far, two downtown residents are taking on the start-up of that association. While he hopes the upcoming meeting will start the work that needs to be done in the downtown core, Hardy said he's intrigued by the Four Pillar approach formally adopted by the City of Vancouver. "I think there's something for us to build on." Community members, landlords, business owners, community members, all levels of government and non-governmental organizations need to be involved, said Hardy, not just the police. Simply raiding drug houses and arresting dealers doesn't solve the problem, he said. "That's not a solution. If it was, that would have been done a long time ago ... but it's one part of the puzzle." The Yukon RCMP's M-Division has also said that any plan to deal with drug dealing, addictions and the crime committed by those desperate for their fix needs a holistic approach, not just enforcement. The Sept. 8 meeting is scheduled to start at 7 p.m. at the Grace Community Church, located at 801 Wheeler St. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin