Pubdate: Wed, 02 Mar 2005 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2005 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.winnipegsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/503 Author: Frank Landry Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) STUPID STATUS SNAGGED Free Crack-Pipe Program Recognized Sometimes it's enough of an honour just being nominated. The free crack-pipe program run by the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority was a runner-up in the Canadian Taxpayers Federation's Teddy awards, which were presented yesterday. The seventh annual spoof of the Oscars targets irresponsible and extravagant government spending. 'SO MUCH DEMAND' "With so much demand put upon the health-care system, the CTF questions to this day why the health authority is handing out free crack pipes," said Adrienne Batra, Manitoba director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. The awards are named for Ted Weatherill, a former bureaucrat who was fired in 1999 over bloated expense accounts he ran up as head of the Canada Labour Relations Board. The crack-pipe program was one of four nominees in the municipal government category. The "winner" was Toronto City Hall, which last year spent $853,000 on emergency shelter beds for homeless people that were never used. Dr. Margaret Fast, the medical officer of health with the WRHA, said she took no offence to being accused of wasting taxpayer dollars with the crack-pipe program. "It reminds me of some of the responses and opinions voiced several decades ago when we started providing a needle-exchange program," Fast said. "There was much the same kind of controversy and lack of appreciation for what the program was all about." The Winnipeg Sun first reported in August the WRHA was handing out kits to addicts with sores and burns on their lips in an effort to stop the spread of HIV and hepatitis C. The kits include glass tube crack pipes. Fast said up to 25 kits are distributed each night. They cost about $2 each. Andre Ouellet, former head of Canada Post and a lifelong veteran of Liberal politics, was given the lifetime Teddy award yesterday for what the federation called a career of frivolous spending of taxpayer money. Lucie McClung, head of the Canadian prison system, won the federal award for collecting $142,000 in travel expenses between 2001 and 2003. The government of Saskatchewan got the provincial award for a ill-fated project to establish a potato industry which ended up costing $36 million. Previous Manitoba winners include the so-called $1-million toilet on the Esplanade Riel and the Manitoba Arts Council, which provided $5,000 for a display of mouse droppings and pubic hair. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom