Pubdate: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 Source: St. Albert Gazette (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 St. Albert Gazette Contact: http://www.stalbertgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2919 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) ADDICTS NEED HELP, NOT NEW LAWS Imagine, if you can, a grimy, rundown apartment in Edmonton's inner city. Scattered among the debris are plates covered in the congealed remains of yesterday's fast food. Drug paraphernalia litters an old, scarred coffee table in the middle of the room. In one corner of the chaos, a woman sits, droopy eyed, her mind somewhere else. In another room, just as dirty, a two-year-old lies on the floor of a playpen. He hasn't been fed or picked up in a few hours. He's too tired to cry anymore. A half hour's drive away, in one of St. Albert's more affluent neighbourhoods, you could eat from the floor just vacuumed and washed by the cleaning lady who comes twice a week. Here, a two-year-old has just finished a healthy lunch with something from each of the five food groups. Soon, the live-in nanny will take the toddler to the park before putting him down for an afternoon nap. The mother, meanwhile, is on her third or fourth alcoholic beverage of the day. While the child sleeps, Mom will have another drink or two before taking a nap of her own and the nanny will prepare the evening meal. Mom's still buzzed over dinner, washed down with a couple glasses of wine. Dad doesn't notice before he disappears into his office to catch up on paperwork. Two addicts, two very different families. The inner city mom has no surrogate mother to care for her child. She uses illegal street drugs and has very little contact with anyone other than her dealer and the men for whom she does favours in exchange for money. Here in St. Albert, the mother has plenty of help, no money problems and her drug of choice can be purchased at the local liquor store. Which one do you think will be targeted by an Alberta government initiative to seize children from parents who are either addicted to drugs or involved in the drug trade? The answer's obvious. Alberta's Children's Services Minister Heather Forsyth is developing legislation, expected to be introduced next spring, which will allow the government to remove children from their homes if parents are involved in a marijuana grow op, involved in a meth house, if there is drug trafficking from the home or if there is drug use. There are several things wrong with this drastic initiative, which would be the first of its kind in Canada. First, it does nothing to help the addicted parents. Second, it's a law that would not be applied evenly across our society. And finally, we don't even need it, because Children's Services already has ample power to remove from their homes children thought to be at risk of abuse or neglect or in need of protection for any other reason. And under the Criminal Code, delinquent parents can be charged with child abandonment if the child is under 10 (Section 217) and with criminal negligence (Section 219). We welcome any attempt to fight the war on dangerous street drugs, but the proposed Drug Endangered Children's Act has nothing to do with attempts to get crystal meth and other hard drugs off our streets. Money and resources devoted to this initiative would be better spent on addictions recovery programs, increased law enforcement and more social workers to help enforce the child protection laws we already have. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake