Pubdate: Wed, 25 Oct 2006 Source: Bridge River Lillooet News (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Lillooet News Contact: http://www.lillooetnews.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4003 IT WAS ALWAYS 'OUR' PROBLEM Pemberton has "The Jungle" -- a place where people go to use alcohol and drugs. Lillooet has its own notorious hangouts -- the school trail and down over the CN Rail tracks. There are many similarities between the two communities and one significant difference. Pemberton and Mount Currie have earned recognition across B.C. for taking the brave -- and necessary -- step of "finding common ground on which to walk" when dealing with the drug and alcohol problems damaging both communities. They learned the hard way, through a tragic death, that drug and alcohol abuse was never 'your' problem - it was always 'our' problem. Will Lillooet and its St'at'imc neighbours be able to emulate the example of Mount Currie and Pemberton? Do our community leaders -- and we don't mean just the elected ones -- have the courage and commitment to recognize that we, too, have a common problem that can only be tackled by a genuine resolve and effort to work together? At first glance, it seems like an overwhelming task. Alcohol abuse is a decades-old, generation-after-generation blight upon Lillooet. All you need to do is go to the town hall on any court day to see the human misery that results from alcohol abuse. And we don't need to look any farther than this week's story about a busted marijuana grow op in Fountain Alley or School Board Chair Val Adrian's comments about students who are afraid to use the high school trail to confirm that we have a drug problem here. We thought Mount Currie Councillor Joanne John made a particularly pertinent observation last week when she stated, "It's a huge job because you have to clean up your own backyard." For starters, that means examining patterns of use in our communities, the perceptions we have about drugs and alcohol and the personal choices we all make. While the task is daunting, some groundwork has been laid. For several years, the District of Lillooet and its St'at'imc neighbours have been holding community forums to discuss issues of common concern. These forums are still at the early stage, but we believe they are one way for community leaders to build trust. Somewhat surprisingly, the Town Creek fire of 2004 left a positive legacy for Lillooet. Many people from Lillooet and the nearby aboriginal communities established new levels of friendship and trust during those long, intense hours of working together in the emergency operations centre. There are other positives. Joanne John and Elinor Warner both remarked on the fact that their communities are still working towards establishing a Friendship Centre like the one Lillooet enjoys, with the programs it offers. Plus, we have the REC Centre, which brings together kids to play on sports teams. And now we have the model and the example of Pemberton and Mount Currie, advice and support from their leaders and the practical recommendations contained in their Winds of Change report. The question is -- do we also have the wisdom and will to acknowledge that drug and alcohol abuse was always 'our' problem and never 'your' problem? - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine