Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Mike Howell, Vancouver Courier DOA PROVIDES MUSICAL ACCOMPANIMENT FOR SAFE INJECTION SITE Punk Rockers Part Of Ongoing Campaign To Drum Up Public Support To Keep Insite Open Past December What's legendary punk rock band DOA got to do with the city's supervised injection site? The local three-chord rockers recently played an afternoon concert in the Downtown Eastside to kick off a second round of campaigning to keep Insite open. The band, along with TV Heart Attack, played in front of a large banner draped on a building on Carrall Street that read, "Hundreds will die if supervised injection site closes." The facility at 139 East Hastings has an operating agreement with the federal government that expires Dec. 31. The Conservative government has not said whether it will keep the doors open. "We're continuing to try and get [the government] to do the right thing," said Mark Townsend, executive director of the PHS Community Services Society. The PHS operates Insite in conjunction with Vancouver Coastal Health. The non-profit organization and community volunteers launched a letter-writing campaign to Prime Minister Stephen Harper in June 2006. To date, Insite for Community Safety has collected approximately 8,000 letters, including 3,000 this summer and several hundred at the Aug. 4 DOA concert. Mayor Sam Sullivan, former police chief Jamie Graham and U.S. activist Noam Chomsky are among the letter writers, as are many longtime drug addicts. The campaign got a boost last week when more than 130 Canadian doctors, scientists and public health professionals endorsed an article published in the Open Medicine journal. Dr. Stephen Hwang, a research scientist at the Centre for Research on Inner City Health in Toronto, outlined his concerns about the federal government's failure to recognize the research on Insite. Hwang pointed out that a series of peer-reviewed research articles on Insite have shown the facility has reduced needle sharing, decreased public drug use, decreased publicly discarded syringes and provided more rapid entry into detox for users of Insite. Hwang also noted the opening of the facility in September 2003 hasn't been associated with any increase in levels of crime, public disorder or injection drug use. "The health of the nation is placed in peril if our leaders ignore crucial research findings simply because they run contrary to a rigid policy agenda driven by ideology or fixed beliefs," he added. Health Minister Tony Clement visited Insite in January of this year and was in the city earlier this month to address the Canadian Medical Association. Clement skirted questions about Insite but has said more research has to be conducted for the government to make "an informed decision" about the facility's future. He made those comments in Sept. 2006 when he agreed to keep Insite open for another 16 months. Proponents of Insite wanted it open for at least another three-and-a-half years. "Do safe injection sites contribute to lowering drug use and fighting addiction? Right now the only thing the research to date has proven conclusively is drug addicts need more help to get off drugs," Clement said. His statement came on the heels of the Canadian Police Association and the RCMP announcing that Insite was contributing to an increase in crime. On Aug. 17, the PHS Community Services Society and heroin addicts Dean Wilson and Shelly Tomic filed a statement of claim in B.C. Supreme Court against the Attorney General of Canada. In the claim, Wilson and Tomic stated that if Insite closes they will face increased risks of overdose, infection, decline in their mental and psychological well-being and other health-related complications from drug use. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek