Pubdate: Tue, 14 Dec 2004 Source: Oshawa This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 Oshawa This Week Contact: http://www.durhamregion.com/dr/info/oshawa/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1767 Author: Lesley Bovie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) CITY ON THE HOOK FOR MORE METHADONE MONEY Downtown Clinic Awarded $43,500 In Legal Costs OSHAWA - The City has been ordered to reimburse a methadone clinic $43,500 for costs incurred during its legal battle with local councillors to stay in downtown Oshawa. The recent Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) decision came as a disappointment for First Step Oshawa Clinic president Fred Lorusso, who had asked for more than $150,000. He argued it was fair compensation for costs the clinic incurred as a result of "the unreasonable and/or bad faith process undertaken by the City" in passing an interim control bylaw, which delayed the issuing of a building permit. The OMB found the City had acted unreasonably by passing an interim control bylaw without any planning rationale, but not maliciously or in bad faith. It awarded First Step $38,500 to reimburse it for its legal costs in successfully challenging the City's interim control bylaw on Aug. 26, 2002, plus another $6,000 in filing for the motion for costs. "This covers only about 20 per cent of what it has cost me, not to mention the human costs and a year spent waiting in a too-small facility," Mr. Lorusso said afterwards. "But I really feel sorry for the citizens of Oshawa," he added. "Myself, I may not live here, but I still pay taxes. The City has spent $400,000 of their own money defending the interim control bylaw and now will pay me another $43,500, all because of personal ambitions and a lack of knowledge of what we really do." The City and First Step have been at odds since the clinic, which dispenses methadone, made plans in 2002 to move from its King Street location, just outside the downtown core, to a larger location on Simcoe Street in the heart of downtown. Methadone is an opiate used to treat addiction to painkillers and heroin. City councillors complained the clinic would bring a bad element to downtown and passed the interim control bylaw to prevent its move. First Step appealed the bylaw and it was struck down by the OMB. The clinic opened in November 2002 but the City continued to appeal the OMB decision. Council's appeal was denied in January. According to a staff report in September 2003, the fight has cost the City close to $400,000 when factoring in staff time, OMB costs and a $60,000 consultant study looking at methadone clinics in other communities. "I think it's time we put the whole methadone fight behind us and emphasize the positive," said Mayor John Gray. "If the clinic expresses the will to move then we will assist them but the fight has been fought and we lost." Councillor Louise Parkes defended the interim control bylaw, adding council had real health and safety concerns about the clinic being in downtown Oshawa. "I think the fact we recently had a coroner's inquiry into methadone-related deaths states we had a reason to be concerned," she said. But while she pointed to the more than 20 methadone-related deaths in Oshawa over the past year, a coroner's jury heard last month during the inquest that those numbers are only raw data and require further study to determine if methadone even played a role. Coun. Parkes said she still disagrees with the method of delivery at big clinics like First Step and pointed to the inquest's 46 recommendations for tighter guidelines. "Methadone treatment has its place and I think that should be in a hospital or an interim health-care facility," she added. Mr. Lorusso has said he's willing to relocate provided the City reimburses him for some of the lease hold improvements he's made to his downtown site. Both sides say they haven't spoken directly to one another about the idea, not wanting to prejudice the OMB ruling on costs. "But I'm not going to go where they would love to have me, which is an industrial area, away from everyone," Mr. Lorusso added. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek