Pubdate: Thu, 08 Apr 2004 Source: Whistler Question (CN BC) Copyright: 2004, Whistler Printing & Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.whistlerquestion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1034 TASK FORCE TARGETS DRUG, ALCOHOL ABUSE A joint Pemberton/Mount Currie task force on drug and alcohol abuse is working to ensure, among other things, that what happened to Ross Leo never happens again. The death of Leo, the 15-year-old from Mount Currie who was beaten to death in Pemberton on May 2, 2002, during a struggle over a bottle of wine, sparked the re-emergence of the Pemberton/Mount Currie Healthy Communities Initiative, and that, in turn, gave rise to the Pemberton/Mount Currie Drug and Alcohol Task Force. While the Healthy Communities group focuses on a wide range of issues related to community-wide social and physical well-being, the task force -- appointed in January -- is focusing on drug and alcohol abuse. The task force recently appointed Brandon Hestdalen, who has 15 years' experience working in the field in both Alberta and B.C., as coordinator of an initiative to gather data and come up with a strategy to address drug- and alcohol-related problems. Hestdalen, has worked as a counsellor for Xit'olacw Community School and Sea to Sky Community Services. He and his wife, Leigh Dan, also ran the Lil'wat Youth Society for three years. Hestdalen was recommended to the task force by Sheldon Tetreault, administrator with the Mount Currie Band. The 12-member group, which meets twice a month, includes representatives of the Village of Pemberton Council, the Mount Currie Band Council, both administrations, the Mount Currie and Pemberton health centres, RCMP, Stl'Atl'imx Tribal Police and others. Its next meeting takes place next Wednesday (April 14) at 7 p.m. at the SLRD board room in Pemberton. Operating on a grant from the National Crime Prevention Centre, the group is working to collect data about drug and alcohol abuse in Pemberton and Mount Currie, Hestdalen said. "The data collection ranges from how much alcohol is being sold to how many suspected drug dealers there are in the area," he said. "Then there is the softer data that goes to questions like 'What's the perception of drug and alcohol abuse in the community? How normal is it?'" Pemberton/Mount Currie is one of 12 communities across Canada which have received $20,000 each for similar initiatives related to drug and alcohol abuse. Hestdalen said that when the group applied for the federal grant, federal officials were quick to choose Pemberton/Mount Currie as one of the 12. "Pemberton/Mount Currie is unique because it's two communities partnered, side-by-side, and a native and a non-native community. So we caught their attention really fast," he said. The data collection phase, which should wrap up in may, involves the completion of a survey targeted at students. They're planning to approach both school boards to get their permission for that portion, he said. As well, he said, some members of the Healthy Communities committee have volunteered to take the surveys into the wider community. The task force, he said, also aims to set up community forums to gather input. A report is to be compiled, and the task force will draw up a strategic plan that makes specific recommendations to address problem areas. Hestdalen said the group hopes to have both documents ready by mid-June. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake