Pubdate: Fri, 20 Oct 2006 Source: Maple Ridge Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc Contact: http://www.mrtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1372 Author: Danna Johnson TREATMENT BEFORE HOUSING Drug treatment beds and mental health services - two things homeless people need before affordable housing according to Maple Ridge Mayor Gord Robson. He made the remarks following the release of the Report on the Homeless in Tri-Cities on Thursday. The report, conducted by the Hope for Freedom Society (HFFS) and funded by the Ministry for Employment and Income Assistance, surveyed the homeless population in Port Coquitlam, Coquitlam and Port Moody from April to September 2006. Of the 122 homeless people involved in the survey, it was found that 39 per cent suffer from some form of mental illness, while 86 per cent experience addictions issues. Rob Thiessen, managing director for HFFS said the results surprised him. "The fact that the percentages were as high as they were was a surprise," he said. HFFS operates as a drug and alcohol recovery facility, he said, so he knew the number of homeless people affected by addiction would be high. But the number living with mental illness, he said, threw him. "That's about 15-per-cent more than I thought it was." He was also shocked that the average age of the "typical" homeless person was 43.5 years. "They are older than I ever would have suspected," Thiessen said. Thiessen suspects that if a similar survey were conducted in the downtown Eastside, "I'm sure they would be much younger." While Thiessen said that it is still "premature" to provide recommendations on how to attack the homelessness issue, he did admit the findings show there ought to be priorities set. "We need more resources, particularly for the mentally ill. Those are the people I felt the worst for, those are the people that we've abandoned." And Robson agrees. In fact, he suggested that those who think throwing affordable housing at the homeless and upping welfare stipends "are nuts." "You can't house people who are addicted," Robson said. To reduce crime, to combat homelessness, he said, the first priority must be to increase the number of drug treatment beds available. The report, he added, "confirms everything" done by the Crystal Meth Task Force. Affordable housing is a secondary concern, he said, explaining that until addiction and mental health issues are addressed "everything else we do is a waste of time." "Hopefully (the report) will silence the critics." While Salvation Army Captain Kathy Chiu agrees that more resources need to be poured into addictions and mental health, she argues that affordable housing is just as important. She agrees that for the entrenched homeless, those who have been living on the street for months and years even, are often plagued with mental illness and addictions problems. But they didn't become homeless overnight, she cautions. They had homes once, too, she said, and families. "You don't just choose to become addicted and then 'Boom' you're homeless." Homeless people are there, she said, because so many "bad choices compound." The "invisible" homeless, those who are couch surfing or sleeping in their cars, and those who are at risk of becoming homeless, Chiu explains, often aren't facing the same barriers as those who are "dumpster diving" and camping out in wooded areas. It's dangerous to ignore the people who are on the verge of becoming homeless, Chiu warns, as they will become the next group of street entrenched people. "If you have a boat and you have several leaks you're still going to sink if you don't plug them all," she cautions. "You can't just plug one leak," and focusing on drug addiction and mental health to the exclusion of affordable housing doesn't deal with all the issues facing the homeless. Thiessen agrees and suggests that the report shows "we can't just be pendulum swingers," and affordable housing, he said, is important. But on a list of priorities, he said, it's not at the top of the list. More treatment beds and help for the mentally ill, he said, ranks No. 1. Because of the survey, HFFS was able to help get 44 homeless people off the street, he said. Once their addiction and mental health issues were dealt with, finding housing wasn't that big of a problem. "There is a shortage of secondary suites," he said, but the biggest shortage is in access to resources. Currently, said Thiessen, it takes four months for a person to be assessed by a mental health worker. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine