Pubdate: Fri, 02 Sep 2005 Source: Simcoe Reformer, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Annex Publishing & Printing Inc. Contact: http://simcoereformer.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2386 Author: Daniel Pearce DRUG PROBLEM 'HUGE' NEEDLES FOUND, VACANT STOREFRONTS BEING USED AS ILLEGAL RESIDENCES IN SIMCOE Downtown Simcoe is plagued with drug users and dilapidated buildings and it's time the county addressed the problem, say merchants in the core. "We're fed up," said Clive Eynon of British Baked Goods, a bakery on Robinson Street. "I've spent $35,000 on upgrades to my building and I have to put up with drug use on the streets and buildings in bad shape." Business people in the core interviewed by the Reformer said they are getting increasingly uneasy as downtown continues on a downward spiral. Kids roam the streets openly using and dealing drugs, vandalism is out of control, and landlords are allowed to let their buildings get run down and rent apartments to drug dealers, they say. "Bylaw enforcement is non-existent," Enyon charged. He estimated there are about half a dozen storefronts that are now being used illegally as residences. Eynon will address council on Sept. 6 to make them aware of the problems and ask for action. Drug activity downtown is "huge," said Les Wiese, owner of Corner Glass and Custom Frame on Robinson Street. "Anyone who says it isn't, they're just walking around with blinders on." A woman who works and lives downtown called the Reformer to report she recently found numerous hypodermic needles on the sidewalk and curb along Colborne Street between Robinson and Peel. "I'm in shock knowing we're in a small town and we can compare ourselves to downtown Toronto," said the woman, who asked not to be identified for fear of retaliation. She said she gathered up the needles, took them to Norfolk General Hospital to be disposed, and then called police. A plain clothes drug officer with the Norfolk OPP told the Reformer the needles were probably used to inject a prescription drug called OxyContin. It's a painkiller used in terminal cancer patients that is "probably the most abused prescription drug" on the street, said the officer, who requested anonymity. It makes its way onto the streets through people who fool doctors into thinking they have back pain and by "double doctoring," he said. "They call it hillbilly heroin," the detective said. Drug use in the county "is not increasing over previous years," said Norfolk OPP Sgt. Zvonko Horvat who suggested owners of downtown buildings and businesses "have to take some responsibility for what's going on." Wiese said he moved his store Aug. 1 from the corner of Colborne and Robinson streets to the corner of Robinson and Kent because of physical problems with the building he was renting and the tenants who lived upstairs. "The tenants threw garbage at people as they went by. They spit on people and dropped beer bottles." A flood from the apartment upstairs a week before he moved - which he blames on the landlord - destroyed paintings and musical instruments he sells. Ron and Sharon Smith who run a video store and hobby shop on Colborne between Peel and Robinson said they have had to close their store early on Friday nights because of large groups of kids fighting on the street out front. "It's awful around here," said Sharon. "Kids hang around the street something terrible." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh