Pubdate: Thu, 23 Aug 2007 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant DRUG POLICY CO-ORDINATOR NOW IN PLACE After a two-year search, the regional district has hired a co-ordinator to lead the charge against drug and alcohol abuse. No one's saying who the winning candidate is, even though she started work on Monday. Staff are setting up her office and working out other details before she's introduced in early September, said human resources director Gary Leier. "We needed to get the right person for the position," he said Thursday. "The task is too important to do otherwise. We'd rather have waited until the right candidate came along." The Four Pillars Coalition, a group of local volunteers, recommended creating the $70,000-a-year position to harmonize the region's anti-drug efforts. The co-ordinator will work with service providers such as Interior Health, Living Positive Resource Centre, the Okanagan Boys and Girls Club and the Kelowna Gospel Mission. "It will be a daunting task with the increase in drug activity on the streets," said Living Positive's Daryle Roberts. "I'd ask the community to not have a lot of expectations immediately." The co-ordinator's job is to reduce service overlap by working as a conduit between the agencies. She'll eventually help develop new ways to support people with addictions. Prevention and education will be key components. "One of the first tasks of the drug-policy co-ordinator is to review what's been done and whether the priorities of the past are the priorities of today," said Leier. The RCMP have worked hard to crack down on drug dealing and open drug use in Kelowna. Other agencies are trying to bolster the other three pillars of the four-pillar approach - education, harm reduction and prevention/treatment. Interior Health has expanded its hours at the downtown Outreach Urban Health clinic to five days. Medical staff treat marginalized people and addicts who would otherwise wait in Kelowna General Hospital's emergency department. But the lack of housing for poor people remains a major obstacle in the city. Advocates argue proper shelter gives them pride and helps wean them from drug activity. The search for a co-ordinator has been a challenge because of the tight labour market and the nature of the job, said regional district spokesman Bruce Smith. "It's rather unique in local government," he said. "The co-ordinator will provide new channels of communication between agencies and identify sources of funding." The Union of B.C. Municipalities is contributing $35,000 toward the position. The regional hospital district has allocated another $100,000 in local tax revenue for one year. The coalition recommended that the co-ordinator work for a minimum 10 years, with funding from the province and Ottawa. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek