Pubdate: Tue, 16 Aug 2005 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Chuck Poulsen TOUGH LOVE Okanagan Father Took His Teenage Daughter To Alberta For Forced Treatment Under Custody To Get Her Off Crystal Meth And Out Of The Drug Scene After being out of touch for several months, Paul took one look at his daughter and knew she was in serious trouble. "I finally found her in a park. She was with the other kids who use it for a scoring centre," said Paul, an Okanagan father who doesn't want his real name used. "Her eyes were dead. She had sores on her skin. She was totally out of control "She had gone from this lovely, intelligent young girl to someone I just didn't recognize anymore. Through my tears, I told her I wished there was something I could do for her." Paul's daughter, who we will call Jennifer, was hooked on crystal meth, an equal opportunity destroyer of young people, regardless of their background Jennifer had a good background and a family that was prepared to get her help, although they would have to go to Alberta to do it In B.C., treatment programs for adolescents are voluntary. In Alberta, the youth can be taken into custody in the treatment centre with the consent of the parents Kelowna-Lake Country MLA Al Horning said he is interested in the mandatory treatment of addicted adolescents in Alberta and will raise the matter in Victoria "To me, it (mandatory treatment) makes sense," said Horning. "Most of the kids don't want to go into treatment, but if their parents want them there, that should be considered." Horning said he would take up the issue with the appropriate ministry "to see what their thinking is on it." Jennifer was taken to the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre in Calgary. Her parents tricked her into the centre on the pretext that they were visiting an uncle who was at AARC After Jennifer walked through the door, they locked it behind her "They cut her off from everyone in her past who was using drugs," said Paul. "There was a graduate of the program with her 24/7. She couldn't go to the washroom by herself "They took all her makeup, everything in her purse and gave her one change of clothes." AARC councillors say their tough love program is unlike any in Canada. A key to the program is its length of treatment It averages about one year and is based on the 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous. The parents are part of the program to the extent that Jennifer's mother and stepfather moved to Calgary for the duration of her stay The program is so anti-drugs that if a parent is a smoker, he or she isn't allowed to enter the building. AARC is open to all, regardless of income level. Families who cannot afford full AARC fees of $125/day ($135 out of province) are assessed on their ability to pay. Remaining fees are covered through AARC fundraising and government support AARC counsellor Colin Brown said there has been talk in B.C. of adopting the Alberta approach of mandatory treatment, but nothing has yet come of it The centre was founded by a group of parents, who hired Dr. F. Deane Vause to provide the treatment model. Most youth in the centre started experimenting with drugs and alcohol between the ages of 11 and 15 Vause says it always starts as a fun way to party and loosen up, but the drugs soon lead kids into a life of robbery and the sex trade as a means of getting more money for more drugs "That's when you start to have problems," said Vause. "You're stealing money from your parents, you start to feel guilty, you're skipping classes, running away from home. Jail is a possibility. Overdoes are common. What started out as fun becomes fun with problems, and then it's just hell." Studies show that substance abuse is involved in more than half of the deaths of young people Jennifer was released from AARC after a year. She still goes back for sessions three or four times a week. Her father says she has graduated from high school with Bs and As and is talking about what she wants to do with her future "I think I've got my daughter back," said Paul. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek