Pubdate: Wed, 23 Mar 2005 Source: Sentinel And Enterprise, The (MA) Copyright: 2005 MediaNews Group, Inc. and Mid-States Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://sentinelandenterprise.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2498 Author: Kate Meyers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) CLINICAL CONTROVERSY Julie LaFrance, 33, travels from her apartment in Framingham to Fitchburg's Habit Management methadone clinic every morning at 5:45 a.m., just to get her daily methadone dose. "There are no sick days, no vacation days, no snow days," LaFrance said. "Every 24 hours you're in the same place. There is no time out or pause button." LaFrance first became hooked on prescription painkillers when she was 19 years old. A doctor prescribed Percocet for her after minor surgery. She didn't know at the time that the feeling the drug gave her would keep her hooked for the next 15 years. "I got married young, had a baby at 17, so part of my problem was that I didn't get to grow up like everyone else," LaFrance said. "By giving myself to that child, I forgot about me." By the time she turned 23, LaFrance had three children and her marriage was dissolving. But her love for Percocet continued, escalating to the point where she would take seven or eight pills at a time just to get high. "I would find myself going to the doctor and complaining of pain to get more," LaFrance recalled. "I didn't seek them out, but if someone I knew had them, I'd ask for some." LaFrance knew she had a problem when she ran out of her pills the morning she left for a week's vacation in Florida with her mother and went through withdrawal. "It was supposed to be a nice week in Florida, and I spent it not feeling good," LaFrance said. "It's all chills, shakes, leg cramps, sweats -- your whole body is muscle cramps. You feel like you're going crazy. When you're in withdrawal, the country could go to war and you don't care, you're just the most miserable person." Eventually, she realized she had to stop taking Percocet. "I wanted to stop because I couldn't get high anymore," LaFrance said. "I wanted to have a life for my kids." But after so many years of continuous opiate dependency, LaFrance found it impossible to cut the pills out of her life entirely. She turned to methadone therapy instead. Getting some pleasure "Methadone allows your body to get some pleasure while you work things out," LaFrance said recently. "The easiest way is to let the drug be in your body." LaFrance ended up at the Airport Road methadone clinic in Fitchburg because there was a waiting list for the clinic in Framingham. LaFrance takes 275 milligrams of methadone a day, she said, more than double the average dosage. She has participated in Habit Management's counseling programs and hopes to start lowering her dosage soon, but she knows it will take a long time. "The only reason I haven't started to taper down is because I haven't gotten myself back into life. I'm stuck in a rotating circle," LaFrance said. "I don't have a car to get me to a job to afford a house. You can't just snap your fingers and do it." LaFrance stands by the help she's received from the methadone clinic. But many city officials in North Central Massachusetts say it, and other nonprofit agencies catering to drug addicts and homeless people are bringing drug users into the region, who then commit more crimes once they get here. Once here, they say people who try but can't kick their addictions end up breaking into homes or businesses and committing robberies to pay for their drug habits. "That's always in the back of people's minds, that drugs brings in crime," said Leominster Ward 2 City Councilor Wayne Nickel. "If you have facilities for drug treatment, then you're going to see a higher number of drug users. It draws its own customers." Leominster Ward 4 City Councilor Robert Salvatelli agrees. "The more bars you have, the more drunk driving you have," Salvatelli said. "If you have these types of things within your community, it's obviously going to attract that kind of clientele." Drugs and property crime City officials say the connection between drug use and crimes, particularly property crimes, could not be clearer. "All of our (breaking-and-entering offenses) are drug and alcohol related," said Leominster Mayor Dean Mazzarella. "It's not someone who needs money to go to the school dance." But LaFrance becomes frustrated when people complain about the methadone clinic. "Methadone treatment is a program for people who are willing to do something to change their lives," LaFrance said. "If you take away the methadone clinics, you're going to have (countless) criminals on the road, breaking into places and stealing just to get drugs, because they're going to be going out of their minds on withdrawal." But Fitchburg officials feel the city is shouldering more than its fair share of nonprofits that serve drug users and homeless people. They feel people who don't live in Fitchburg come into the city to use one of the drug clinics or homeless shelters, instead of getting help where they live. "For some reason, people are allowed to take taxis from Worcester to Fitchburg to get methadone," said Jody Joseph, a Fitchburg city councilor. "We the taxpayers are paying for those taxi rides. That's where the abuse is." An unfair burden? Stephen L. DiNatale, an at-large Fitchburg city councilor, believes the city is being asked to do too much to help deal with a regional drug problem. "We provide more than our fair share of the services for a problem that is arguably a regional one," said DiNatale. "The fact that they're in Fitchburg perpetuates the perception that Fitchburg has more of a problem with drugs than other communities, and I'm not sure that's accurate." In fact, a quick review of nonprofits geared toward drug users, the homeless and people suffering from a mental illness or condition, shows most agencies operate in Fitchburg. A list of the nonprofits in the area and where they're located includes: * Gardner Visiting Nursing Association, Inc., 35 Main St., Fitchburg; * Habit Management Institute, 155 Airport Road, Fitchburg; * Montachusett Opportunity Council, 430 Main St., Fitchburg; * Our Father's House, Inc., 4 Leighton St., Fitchburg; * Valiton House, 198 Fairmount St., Fitchburg; * LUK Crisis Center, 99 Day St., Fitchburg; * Three Pyramids, 66 Day St., Fitchburg; *Montachusett Addictions Council, Inc., 51 Central St., Leominster; * Common Sensitivity, Inc., 1 Main St., Leominster; * Herbert Lipton Community Mental Health Center, Inc., 100 Erdman Way, Leominster; and * Montachusett Interfaith Hospitality Network, 10 Wachusett St., Fitchburg. The agencies provide jobs to local residents and offer services to those who need them, but many say they hurt the city more than they help. Hurting Main Street No agency has been the focus of more attention during the past two years than the GVNA's Main Street community services center, which sits in a nondescript storefront in Moran Square. The center is wedged in a strip between Dunkin' Donuts and Store 24. Its hours are limited, and on most days the curtained windows are dark. Its backers say prostitutes and homeless people no longer congregate outside its doors. But both Fitchburg Mayor Dan H. Mylott and Police Chief Edward Cronin called for the center to be closed down after a man walked in and stabbed a client in March 2004. Employees at the center distribute needle-cleaning kits in an effort to curb the spread of HIV and AIDS. But Mylott said the clinic attracts the wrong crowd to Main Street. "It created a clientele that uses drugs, a byproduct of which was to allow them to continue drug use," Mylott said. The needles "create a safety hazard for the whole neighborhood." GVNA took steps to curb crime at the center after the stabbing, installing security cameras and keeping closer tabs on the people it serves. "To their credit, they have been very cooperative with the city," Mylott said. "But I still don't believe they should be providing needle kits in Moran Square." Mylott teamed up with Cronin and state Rep. Emile Goguen, who runs a homeless shelter in Fitchburg, as they fought unsuccessfully to cut the center's funding after the stabbing, or at least move it off of Main Street. The center receives its funding from the state Department of Public Health, and its contract doesn't expire until June 2006. GVNA maintains it is essentially a referral service, offering counseling and education about HIV/AIDS. "We're here to provide HIV treatment and to prevent the spread of the virus," said Gail Dorval, director of Community Programs for GVNA. "The behavior (of intravenous drug users) is what causes HIV, so we put them in touch with someone who helps eliminate that behavior." Elaine T. Fluet, CEO of the Gardner Visiting Nursing Association, said the organization is constantly working to improve its image in the Fitchburg community, and it is still looking to move to a location off Main Street. A new location would only be considered, however, if it was accessible to those who need it. She also mentioned the possibility of starting a mobile clinic, where clients could receive the same services from a counselor in a van. "We want to be a good neighbor, and we want to work with the community," Fluet said. "If it's good for the community, it's good for everyone involved." Time to go But Mylott just wants the center out of Fitchburg. Distributing needle-cleaning kits "is wrong and doesn't belong on Main Street," Mylott said. "If they're going to do that, I don't think they should be in Fitchburg." Roughly 300 people made 5,700 visits to the Main Street center in 2004, according to Fluet. The center employs six people, making it a small operation in comparison with other services in the area. The wrong approach? Mylott also disagrees with the approach taken at the methadone clinic. He feels they are trying to solve one drug problem by starting another. Weaning a person off drugs completely is the only effective way to address the problem, he said. "That answer (methadone) to drug use is not the right answer," he said. "Maybe it's a better drug. Maybe it doesn't destroy your system, but it's still a drug and you have to have it. If methadone clinics are so great, then why aren't they everywhere?" Officials at the clinic refused to respond to numerous requests for interviews. Habit Management Institute is the only methadone clinic in North Central Massachusetts. The next closest methadone clinics are in Lowell and Worcester. Habit Management benefits from its Airport Road location, which is less visible and farther away from heavily traveled areas in the downtown. Surrounded by industrial buildings, Habit Management is only busy in the early morning hours when users line up outside its door to receive their daily dose of methadone, LaFrance, who receives treatment at the clinic, told the Sentinel & Enterprise. Their services include AIDS testing, assessment, case management, HIV counseling, mental health, tuberculosis testing and urine testing. Methadone users are drug tested every day, LaFrance said, but oftentimes the clinic will still give a patient their daily dose even when their drug test is positive. "People come up positive all the time, but they'd rather have you keep trying," LaFrance said. Patients also must meet with a case manager and are encouraged to participate in the various counseling programs the clinic provides, she said. The private company provides statistics that contradict the commonly held assumption that drug treatment centers attract crime. For every dollar spent on methadone, their Web site states, society accrues $4 in economic benefits from reduced crime and related problems. Hurting Fitchburg's image But Mylott is not convinced. "It's a waste of taxpayers' money, hurts our city's image, and encourages the perception that this is a city riddled with drugs," Mylott said. "I hope that we can have recovery programs that would be successful without hurting our image." Several city officials stressed Fitchburg is unfairly dealing with more of its share of the drug problem. "The city of Fitchburg has a certain percentage of its population with a problem with drugs, so henceforth the services appear," said Ralph A. Romano III, Fitchburg city councilor at large. "When the services come in one location to service the entire region, it becomes a magnet for all the people who want to utilize the services." City officials feel Leominster and other cities should do more. "Heroin is an epidemic in the entire country; it's not just specific to Fitchburg," said Joseph. "It needs to be addressed everywhere." The problem is not being addressed in Leominster, Fitchburg officials say, bringing those who need treatment to Fitchburg. Helping the homeless Our Father's House, a homeless shelter, counts people from Fitchburg, Leominster, Gardner, Ashburnham and other towns among the 700 it serves a year, according to Barbara Garneau, its director. "Some say, 'Let those places put up their own shelters,' but then it becomes an issue with cost effectiveness," Garneau said, explaining that more shelters would only spread the funding thinner. Our Father's House in Fitchburg offers emergency and transitional housing to low-income people who can't afford to live on their own. Many find themselves in shelters because of drug and alcohol problems or mental illness, Garneau said, but shelter officials require that people be drug and alcohol free to stay there. "We don't believe that if you're chemically dependent that you'll be a responsible tenant," Garneau said. "You just can't afford to be using." Our Father's House has taken a zero-tolerance policy against substance abuse, requiring tenants to be substance-free for 30 days before entering transitional housing. Methadone users can't use the shelter. "Using methadone causes problems with other residents," Garneau said. "If they see another resident who's out of it, they want to use themselves." The shelter's approach relies on creating a supportive community to discourage relapse. "It's still very difficult for them to live alone again," Garneau said. "They learn more from each other than they would get from us." The shelter enjoys a 10 percent recidivism rate, impressive compared with the national rate of 80 percent, Garneau said. The live-in house manager at the Leighton Street men's transitional housing facility is himself a graduate of the program, Garneau said, which helps residents. "It's purposely meant to be individual living," Garneau said. "We oversee it, but we don't hold people's hands." Despite the criticism that has fallen on the area's drug treatment facilities and homeless shelters, those who work in the field say success stories keep them going. "Success varies by individual," said Garneau, telling the story of one elderly man who came to Our Father's House toward the end of his life. He had lived in his car in Leominster for years and was finally persuaded to seek shelter by a church pastor who feared he had grown too old to weather the winter outdoors. Shortly after arriving at the shelter, the man was admitted to the hospital for pneumonia. When he died, Garneau felt satisfaction mixed with sadness. "I consider that a success," she said. "He did not die in his car or in the woods." Another man has struggled with drug abuse for years and finally arrived at Our Father's House already sick with a terminal illness. His recovery and treatment has been so successful, Garneau said, he now plans to reunite with his family in Colorado. "He told me the best part is that my family doesn't want me to come back, they need me to come back," Garneau recalled. "I know he doesn't have long, but when he does die, he'll die in peace." Garneau, like most who devote their lives to helping the less fortunate, understands that often a full recovery is not possible. Any steps toward regaining a functioning life are to be celebrated. "Success is in the eye of the beholder," Garneau said. "Making amends with family and becoming a productive part of society is important." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth