Pubdate: Sat, 15 Jul 2006 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2006 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Kathleen Gowans Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n929/a08.html?235183 ADDICTS COME FROM GOOD HOMES Re: Missing The Revival, July 13. I speak to the contentious topic of locating halfway houses in residential areas with the confidence of three credentials. For the past four months my husband and I have lived at the corner of Richmond and Sherbourne streets. We fit the demographic of the "gentrified." We are "late Boomers," university educated, successful. We also have a daughter who has -- despite the benefit of parents anxious to extend the benefits of their success -- chosen a street life with all that that entails. Let me tell you what life is like in our corner of the world. I leave my condo every morning at about 6 a.m. to walk my German Shepherd. I walk again in the evening on the same beat. We walk up Sherbourne to Adelaide and go east to what I call the "Drug Park," which is the triangle of grass between Adelaide and Richmond. I have a lot of experience with drugs. As an observer and as a parent of a drug abuser. My antenna is still good. I see the street people going into the bushes, I see the prostitutes, I also see the young executives pulling up in their late model cars, with cellphones calling out the dealers. In four months, I have only once seen the police bike patrols go into the drug park to check on the scene. I know I am safe because of my dog, but every day I re-evaluate that confidence. We are lucky, as we aren't staying. However, thanks to our daughter -- who has been battling addiction since the age of 14 -- I understand the fear of halfway houses for addicts and released offenders. No one would choose to have one in their neighbourhood. But as in our case, they are not "others," they are not from broken homes. They are from our homes in good areas, from so-called good families. As a society, we have to stop putting the undesirables in ghettoes, whether in neighbourhoods or segregated classrooms and learn to heal our wounded. Kathleen Gowans, Toronto - --- MAP posted-by: Derek