Pubdate: Fri, 02 Dec 2005 Source: Kelowna Capital News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005, West Partners Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.kelownacapnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1294 Author: Marshall Jones Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) DRUG PROBLEM EVERYWHERE, SAYS OWEN The rest of the world is slowly figuring out what Philip Owen learned during his nine years as mayor of Vancouver: The war on drugs just isn't working. Owen has been travelling the world talking about his experience delivering a solution to the drug problem to the city of Vancouver. "The options are, can we incarcerate our way out of here? No, clearly. We know that isn't working. We are not going to legalize our way out of it and we are not going to ignore it, so we are going to manage it," he said at a John Howard Society symposium held in Kelowna on Thursday. "Decriminalization and legalization are going to happen, there is no doubt about it," he told his audience. Owen said even some ardent conservatives in the U.S. are turning to that idea and many countries in Europe and elsewhere are considering it as well. He said $700 billion per year is made from the sale of cocaine and heroin around the world and it is all going into the hands of criminals, perhaps terrorists as well. Owen said if governments can regulate alcohol, tobacco and pharmaceuticals, it can legalize, tax and regulate these drugs as well. The taxes could easily pay for treatment. Owen's term as mayor began in 1993, two years before the phenomenon of crack cocaine began destroying many in his city as it did elsewhere. "The whole environment changed," he said. "Then we decided to do something and the citizens of Vancouver said the status quo is not an option because whatever we were doing was not working." He put together a symposium of people from around the world to find new solutions and borrowed the four pillars approach from the Swiss. It operates on the idea that to tackle the drug problem, four actions must operate together: enforcement, treatment, harm reduction and prevention. What they saw in Vancouver is nearly identical to Kelowna's crime and drug problem in the past three to five years, but Owen gave some encouragement to local social services agencies. "I have been to conferences in Belfast, Paris, Lisbon and New York and I just went to Afghanistan and met with military and government people trying to wrestle with the problem," he said. "Don't feel guilty about Kelowna. The drug problem is everywhere." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin