Pubdate: Fri, 26 May 2006 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Allen Garr DUNBAR NIABYS WAY OFF BASE It is time we ran a little reality check on my neighbours who are freaked out at the possibility of supportive housing for dual-diagnosed people being built at West 16th Avenue and Dunbar. Last night, a group of East Side residents held the first meeting of a community advisory committee set up to deal with a similar facility for people with mental issues and drug addictions now under construction on Fraser Street. When the Fraser Street project was first announced in 2004, there was a firestorm of protest from the neighbourhood. In the end though there was an accord. During the debate the city confirmed that as part of its drug strategy, treatment centres should be spread around the city. Dual-diagnosed people, after all, live everywhere and are in every walk of life. Vancouver Coastal Health figured the city needed four to six more facilities. Since then, the city and the health authority have been working on a report to assess all the supportive housing needs for Vancouver. This includes everything from seniors' housing to those projects modelled after Fraser Street. But a bomb went off on the West Side last year, shortly after the city purchased the property at Dunbar and 16th Avenue and the city's senior housing planner Rob Whitlock spoke with some of the local residents about possible options. This week, as the protest gathered steam, a website appeared at NIABY.com: Not In Anybody's Back Yard. None of the backers' names are included. The newsletter the group produced claims "dual diagnosis patients are the most likely population for this site." Nobody knows that for sure but they would prefer seniors' housing. The newsletter then goes on to make a number of points about dual-diagnosed people, which are debatable if not downright incorrect. Most notably they claim that "there are currently no effective treatment options." Michele Sutherland, who runs Vancouver Coastal Health's dual diagnosis program, said, "I'm appalled by that." She adds that "treatment options are extremely effective." Her program, which has been operating since 1991, handles 250 clients and includes an addiction doctor and two psychiatrists. Residents in the Fraser Street residence will likely be clients of that program. The newsletter also states "dual diagnosis patients also have high rates of violent and acquisitive crime." Mark Smith, whose organization Triage will run the Fraser Street project, said they are more often the victims of violent crime than the perpetrators. Sutherland said not everyone is psychotic. Their mental illness would not necessarily involve any violence at all and includes depression, anxiety attacks or agoraphobia. The newsletter correctly points out the facility on Fraser Street will have a low staffing level. But virtually all the treatment will take place off site at programs like the one that Sutherland runs. And while the Fraser Street facility will be "dry"-"relapses will be permitted." Actually, Smith says "lapses"-a beer or a joint-will be tolerated, but only once. The client will be expected to deal with it. "Relapses" usually means the client "disappears." As far as the statement that "even trained experts cannot detect when a recovering addict begins to use drugs again about 50 per cent of the time," Smith says that may be true if the addict is visiting a counsellor once a week but in a round-the-clock model like Fraser Street the problem is almost immediately obvious. Everyone agrees this West Side protest over the potential new site will have more money and power behind it than Fraser Street. If there was ever a time for city councillors and the mayor to douse the flames NIABY.com is fanning and support this kind of facility, it is now. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek