Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jun 2006 Source: Chronicle, The (CN QU) Copyright: 2006 Media Transcontinental Contact: http://www.westislandchronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4097 Author: Marc Lalonde Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) PORTRAIT OF YOUTH LOOKS BLEAKER More West Island teenagers are having unprotected sex than ever before, getting into drugs and alcohol at younger ages and are living in conditions that are comparable to some of Montreal's worst neighbourhoods, Table de Concertation de Jeunesse de l'Ouest de l'Ile representatives said at a news conference Monday in Beaconsfield. "On average, kids are 13 or 14 years old when they first try drugs and alcohol," said Pointe Claire social-development section manager Shelley Haynes. "There's easy access, even for minors, and unprotected sex is on the rise among teenagers," she said. The news conference launched the 'portrait of West Island youth' report, put together by the Table de Concertation and numerous partners, including Pointe Claire and Beaconsfield, the West Island YMCA, the West Island Community Resource Centre, the West Island Health and Social Services Centre and the Montreal Police Service and funded by the federal public-security ministry. The report's findings show the popular myth of the West Island as a bastion of white, anglophone rich people took a serious beating. "The West Island is a very diverse territory, with both francophones and anglophones existing together, as well as all the different ethnicities that exist here," said Beaconsfield community-life director Jean-Pierre Beauchamp. Some sections of the West Island have populations where more than one-fifth of residents are living life without a high-school diploma - -- including parts of Ste. Genevieve (27 per cent have no diploma), Dorval (24 per cent) and Ste. Anne de Bellevue (23 per cent) and in two sections of Pierrefonds. Drug use appears to go hand in hand and runs opposite to the level of parental involvement in a teen's life. The more the parent was involved with their child's life, the less likely the teen was to use drugs, the report said. Some things presented in the report were no-brainers -- conclusions such as teens in Pointe Claire consume alcohol in the Terra Cotta woods, the idea that bars along the waterfront in Ste. Anne de Bellevue contribute to teens' delinquency and the notion that the Montreal Transit Society's Fairview Pointe Claire bus terminal is a trouble spot because so many teens converge there at a given time -- but other, more disturbing trends came to light -- such as that West Islanders are noted for their high number of suicide attempts for teens aged between 15 and 19. Street gangs are also making inroads in the area. Even though many teens surveyed said they didn't perceive street gangs as a problem, many said they knew a member of a gang or a sub-class of the street gangs. Police also indicated a high level of gang activity at the Fairview terminal. "Despite the high number of suicide attempts, it's unfortunate there is no specialized psychiatry resource for youth on the territory," Haynes said. The report also indicated West Island teens felt isolated in their communities because of the lack of public-transit resources available in some parts of the West Island -- as well as many problems with loitering and inappropriate behaviour, which can be -- at least in part blamed on infrequency of buses. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek