Pubdate: Wed, 02 Nov 2005 Source: Red Deer Advocate (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 Red Deer Advocate Contact: http://www.reddeeradvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2492 Author: Joe McLaughlin, managing editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) TEMPORARY DETOX SITE UNASSAILABLE Monday marked an important milestone in making Red Deer a healthier and safer community. The municipal planning commission unanimously approved a plan to permit a temporary drug and alcohol detox centre downtown, on the main floor of a building southeast from City Hall square. It's stage one of a plan by the Safe Harbour Society to have a detox centre and an overnight shelter for people who are high on drugs and at risk set up together. The mood at City Hall for the hearing on Monday was markedly different from what transpired in earlier attempts to locate the detox centre at two different sites. There was none of the rancour, fear or controversy that scuttled previous efforts to locate the detox centre in the Scott Block or in the old EXH building on 50th Avenue. The vote of the municipal planning commission was unanimous. Questions from commissioners dealt with details, which were quickly addressed, rather than the suitability of the site. That's a credit to the staff and volunteers from the Safe Harbour Society, who did their homework beautifully, addressing the concerns of not only City Hall but, more importantly, of nearby businesses and residents. Fears that the temporary eight-bed detox location will become a permanent fixture have been set aside. It is only authorized to operate for a year. It will only open if the city approves the second step to permit a joint-use detox centre and mat program at 5246 53rd Ave. before the end of December. That issue will come before city council next week, leading to a public hearing in December. If municipal approval is not given, both programs will be scuttled. The Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission has committed $750,000 for the two programs, but without city approval by the end of this year, that money will be withdrawn. That would be a tragedy. The need for a detox centre in Red Deer is beyond dispute. As the city grows, and as the scourge of drugs like crystal methamphetamine expands, the need becomes more urgent with each passing month. There's no reason now for this plan not to go forward. Safe Harbour addressed concerns that downtown residents might have had about crime, loitering or drug abuse adjacent to the temporary centre. People who check themselves into detox centres are trying to break their substance-abuse habits. Drug dealers will not waste time hanging around the site. People undergoing detox for periods of up to 15 days will not be going in and out; they won't be bringing drugs into the building; they won't have cellphones to get a fix. They will stay in the centre for the duration of their treatment. Mostly, they will be sleeping. People seeking detox are not only sick, they are very tired. When clients leave the building, they will be restricted to an area surrounded by a solid fence more than two metres high. They will be supervised at all times in this area. The detox centre will have staff on duty 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The area promises to be safer, rather than less so at night, because of its presence. People being treated in the detox centre will find a safe place with supportive professionals helping them to break the scourge of substance abuse. They will not get medical treatment there. The hospital is nearby for urgent medical needs. Addicts who need non-urgent medical care for their addictions are sent to Calgary or Edmonton. The increasing seriousness of the drug problem in Red Deer has led to 73 such transfers this year, including seven last week. The detox centre promises to be a good neighbour and a great asset. So, too, will the overnight shelter when it moves to a new joint site at the northwest end of downtown. Police say there have been few if any troublesome issues at the shelter's current location at the south end of downtown. It's so low key that many in the neighbourhood don't know it's there. That should not change at all, when it moves north next year. Seven months ago, when the old EXH location was rejected, Mayor Morris Flewwelling expressed confidence that despite repeated failures to find a detox-overnight shelter site, a better option would still come forward. He has been proven right. The new two-step plan for both is unassailable. The Scott Block, at 4816 Gaetz Ave., meanwhile, is on its way to becoming a treasured civic cultural resource. Joe McLaughlin is Advocate managing editor. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin