Pubdate: Wed, 06 Sep 2006 Source: Esquimalt News (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Esquimalt News Contact: http://www.esquimaltnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1290 Author: Brennan Clarke Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) INJECTION SITES PANNED BY NATIONAL POLICE GROUP Police Call For More Education, Treatment Options For Addicts Safe-injection site proponents in Vancouver and Victoria will have to forge ahead without the support of rank-and-file police officers across the country. Around 200 delegates at the Canadian Police Association's annual general meeting in Victoria voted unanimously Friday to oppose safe-injection sites and called on Prime Minister Stephen Harper to create a national drug strategy focusing on education, treatment and prevention. "Safe-injection sites are not going to solve the drug issues in our community," said CPA vice-president Const. Tom Stamaktakis. "This is a significant issue for our members." Stamatakis, a Vancouver police officer and president of the Vancouver Police Union, said rank-and-file officers have seen few positive results from his city's three-year experiment with legalized drug use at a facility known as InSite. "We're not seeing improvements as a result of the safe-injection site," he said. "In our experience, myself and the other officers that work those streets, things are worse than they've ever been." Safe-injection sites are seen as one aspect of harm-reduction regime dubbed the four pillars approach. Stamatakis said officers say the other three pillars - education, prevention and treatment - are being pushed aside in favour of legalized drug use. "There's a sense of pervasiveness, entitlement and enabling," he said. "Our officers are unanimous in their feeling about how destructive and devastating these drugs are. This sends the wrong message to young people about drug use." InSite, which operates under a special exemption from a section of the Canada Health Act that bans illegal drug consumption in health-care facilities, will have to close up shop Sept. 12 if Ottawa decides not to extend the pilot project. Despite uncertainty over the future of InSite, the City of Victoria, the Vancouver Island Health Authority and the University of Victoria have joined forces on a safe-injection site study that will accompany Victoria's application for a Health Canada exemption next spring. Victoria police Chief Paul Battershill, a staunch advocate of harm-reduction approach in dealing with street level addiction issues, said any such facility in Victoria would have to maintain a sharp focus on all four harm reduction pillars. "I have spoken to the police association representatives in regard to the safe injection site issue. They are concerned that other pieces such as prevention, education and treatment have not been proceeded with and they question the value of a safe-injection site without the other pieces," Battershill said. "I think we would try very hard here to ensure that the other components are in place here in Victoria if we are successful with a safe-injection site application." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath