Pubdate: Wed, 31 Aug 2005 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2005, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Matthew Kwong, Toronto Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) ADDICTS WANT DETOX TO STAY Health Ministry's Planned Closures Threaten Lives: Critics THE MINISTRY of health is saving dollars when it should be saving lives, protesters charged yesterday during a rally against the closure of one of the city's busiest detox centres. 'Where Am I To Go' "With the detox (centre) that's closing, when I want to quit heroin, where am I going to go?" Penny, 22, said outside the Withdrawal Management Centre at 501 Queen St. W. "A lot of my friends use this facility to get clean, but if they keep closing, a lot more people are going to die from overdosing." About a hundred people converged in front of the centre yesterday, where addicts, centre staff and workers from OPSEU Local 500 stood on milk crates to blast the government for "endangering lives." In July, the ministry of health and long-term care announced it would close 40% of the detox beds in the city. The 20 beds at the Queen St. W. facility will be the first of 36 beds scheduled to close on Aug. 31. By Oct. 31, a detox centre at Ossington Ave. and Queen St. will close. "That will bring the number of beds to only 100 serving the 4.5 million people in Toronto," one protester said, adding that even the previous 136 beds couldn't meet the demand. But Dan Strasbourg, a ministry spokesman, argued the province was in fact broadening detox services through "daytox" programs, which allow users to be treated at home. 758 More Spaces "We're going from the previous model, which was withdrawal management services that consisted of beds, and we're expanding it to include day and community withdrawal management," Strasbourg said. "This is going to mean ... 758 more Torontonians will have more access." The plan would shut out the homeless population that needs these services most, OPSEU Local 500 president Linda Wagner said. "We know the majority of those clients are homeless, so what does that do?" Penny, who lives under the Bathurst St. bridge, said part of recovery means staying away from environmental pressures. "I'm trying to quit cold turkey," she said. "I can't because I'm around my drug dealers. I'm around it all that time and I need a detox bed. I need these places to stay open." - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman