Pubdate: Wed, 08 Feb 2006 Source: Robson Valley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Miro International Pty Ltd. Contact: http://www.robsonvalleytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4087 Author: Andru McCracken Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) COMMUNITY RESPONDS TO SUBSTANCE ABUSE The first meeting of a group looking at substance abuse in Valemount drew 14 people last Thursday. Rick Publicover volunteered to see if there was interest in a grass roots community project that would endeavour to reduce substance abuse in the community. Apart from village staff and some councillors, the meeting drew people from the RCMP, Chamber of Commerce, United-Anglican Church, Northwest Specialty Mill, as well as social workers, drug addiction workers and concerned citizens. Publicover said that the first exercise was for those present to speak about their concerns regarding drug and alcohol addiction in Valemount. The concerns included: Drug abuse as it relates to violence Safety issues in the logging industry and highway safety Concern for youth and high risk activities How employers can help employees Parent substance abuse and effects on children Community tolerance to drugs and alcohol Crystal meth Safety of residents Publicover became involved with this issue while a manager in a mill in Fort Nelson. Fort Nelson was struggling with drug addiction throughout the community, and Publicover said it was a problem in the mill as well. When it was discovered that one employee snuck pot cookies into someone else's lunch, Publicover called the police and asked them to deal with it. He was surprised when the officer said that it was up to the mill to manage its own drug problems. But eventually the idea of managing the problem before the law enforcement stage began to make sense. Publicover became part of a group based in Fort Nelson that helped the mill and the broader public become more aware and less tolerant of drugs. Enabling Publicover said that to deal with the drug issue people have to understand how their actions can enable others to carry on with their addictions. "Enabling means either you do something, or don't do something, that causes somebody not to be held accountable. "Let's say I'm a supervisor at work, and I happen to be at the doorway as an employee is coming back from the parking lot after lunch, and I smell marijuana on them. I know I smelled marijuana, the employee knows I smelled marijuana, but I let the person go by and don't do anything." He said the message to the employee is that smoking marijuana is OK and there are no repercussions if they do it. "It could be a co-worker lending a person money, because they think they are helping them out," he said. He said that there has to be some catalyst that causes people with substance abuse issues to seek help. Publicover said he's been in situations where management didn't deal with a substance abuse concern because there was no policy or information, because they weren't aware of the issues and because they didn't know what resources were there to provide help. Meetings This new group, which doesn't have a name yet, will attempt to provide employers, parents and community members with the information and resources they need to help the community deal with substance abuse. The group will be meeting on the first Thursday each month at the village meeting room at lunchtime. The drug scene Sean Tobin, the addictions counsellor in Valemount and McBride, said he didn't have any statistics on drug abuse in the valley, and in keeping with their policy on confidentiality, he couldn't release any details about his caseload. Tobin works with individuals who seek out help for their addictions, either through a referral from a doctor, or directly. He said that because he deals only with individuals who seek out treatment, he hasn't got a sense of the greater drug problems in the community. Tobin used a metaphor to describe his work and how it relates to this new community effort: "In social work, we sometimes find ourselves pulling people out of the river. Eventually someone has to go up river and find out who is pushing all these people into the river in the first place." Tobin said the community would benefit from prevention work. "I'm all for the [new group]. I was really happy with the turnout and the wide variety of people there," he said. "It is a tremendous first step." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D