Pubdate: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 Source: Ubyssey (CN BC Edu) Contact: http://www.ubyssey.bc.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/706 STEPHEN HARPER: MY ANTI-DRUG On October 4th, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Minister of Health Tony Clement, and Minister of Public Safety Stockwell Day jointly announced the new National Anti-Drug Strategy. Billed as a two-pronged effort to crack down on drug offences while being compassionate to victims, the "new" anti-drug strategy is similar to past political jargon. The strategy will spend a combined $63.8 million over two years, focusing on three initiatives: law enforcement, a national prevention campaign, and treatment services for substance abuse. Balancing enforcement and recovery, the policy seems to be an attempt at electioneering-an easy grab at the votes of those who want a tougher stance on crime, though mild enough not to offend the more libertarian among us. As a minority government trying to make it through October without the call for an election, the Harper government has taken a balanced approach to combating drugs in Canada. With $32.2 million reserved for treatment, $21.6 million for law enforcement, and $10 million for a preventative campaign, this drug strategy is not what many on the left expected from the Conservative government. However, its approach does fall into the problematic practice of treating users and punishing traffickers without acknowledging that many traffickers are users who, left without help, turn to selling. The policy reserves $32.2 million over two years to "support treatment services that will address substance abuse," as the 2007 budget's website reports. Despite this emphasis on "treatment services," it is frustrating to find innovative projects such as Vancouver's Insite to be in a constant state of limbo. The safe injection site is currently running on a six-month extension of its legality. Harper has stated that he is "skeptical" of programs like Insite, despite the facility's support and backing by many in the scientific community. Meanwhile, the Conservatives' new strategy has devoted a third of their budget to law enforcement, which can't be expected to improve the wellness of people caught in the cycle of drug addiction. With a backlog of scientific evidence that testifies to its benefits, Insite should be embraced and expanded, not ignored and discredited. Also included in the new anti-drug strategy are mandatory minimum sentencing rules, which Harper says will be used for "serious drug offences." This approach can be jarring when applied to users as well as traffickers. The truth of the drug world is that many times drug users are forced into drug trafficking as a means of feeding their habit. If mandatory minimums are extended to users, the Conservative "treatment services" may be nothing more than a three month jail sentence. The federal government has repeatedly shown an unwillingness to take serious steps to reduce harm to existing users of hard drugs. Therein lies the problem with this new policy: what it omits. Intravenous drug users in Vancouver and across Canada are overdosing and contracting HIV for lack of facilities that accept their condition. A realistic new strategy must acknowledge the needs of existing drug addicts. They're not going away. To think otherwise would be a grave mistake. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom