Pubdate: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 Source: Now, The (Surrey, CN BC) Copyright: 2007 South Fraser Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.canada.com/surreynow Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1462 Author: Marisa Babic SHOULD NEWTON RESIDENTS FEAR TREATMENT CENTRES? At the age of nine, John Volken was sent to an orphanage in Germany. He lost his father to the war and his mother to a serious illness. Some might become hardened and bitter about their fate at such a tender age but Volken, a deeply religious soul, believes his time in the refuge with his 30 "brothers" was a fine character-building experience that helped mold the man he became. "I had a wonderful time," he says of the orphanage. "I though some day when the time is right I'd like to be involved in that type of work." Volken, 66, later immigrated to Canada and went on to create a business empire as the owner of United Furniture Warehouse and became a multi-millionaire. In 2004, he decided the time was right for him to shift gears and help those in need just as the caregivers in the German orphanage once helped him. He sold his assets to The Brick and pumped nearly all his cash into the creation of the John Volken Foundation, which funds Welcome Home in Newton, a residential treatment centre for troubled men, some ex-cons, who have struggled with drug and alcohol abuse. Welcome Home, which currently has 15 men ranging in age from 22 to 52 years old, is billed as a therapeutic community for men who have already been through detox and are ready and willing to take the next steps in getting their lives back on track. "The key to a therapeutic model is peer pressure to change," explains manager Bill Kooner. "You're accountable for everything you do. You're accountable to your peers, so if you're screwing up, not carrying your workload, your peers call you on it." With its rigid set of rules, the goal of the program is to teach the men leadership and job skills. They currently live in several houses in the Newton area and come to work daily at Welcome Home's shop, which sells furniture, clothing and other department store type items. But Volken has bigger dreams. He wants to consolidate all of Welcome Home's facilities under one roof and is proposing to build $20-million, 72-unit complex complete with a gym, classrooms, gardens and other amenities. Although it's being billed as a "high-end condo" the proposal has come under fire from Newton residents who say their part of town is already saturated with recovery houses. Opponents fear for the safety of their kids and a drop in property values. Kooner believes the community doesn't understand what Welcome Home is all about. The society has tried to ally fears at a recent public information meeting by dispelling misconceptions and stereotypes. "Our biggest issue is to educate them about what we're doing," Kooner says. The community, he acknowledges, fears the residents will be wandering their streets. "That's what they think, that there's going to this huge 72-bed facility with druggies and alkies who are going to be all day long wandering around their neighbourhood," he says. While the facility isn't a jail, "our guys are not allowed out on their own" without an escort. The daily routine is strictly regimented, beginning with a wakeup call at 6 a.m. followed by chores, work at the store and lights out by 11 p.m. Kooner says the idea is to keep the clients so busy that they crave bed at the end of the day and keep their minds off the lure of drugs. "A lot of it is keep them, busy, busy, busy. An addict's worst enemy is spare time." Grady Whims, 29, has been at the facility for 15 months and doesn't fit the typical profile. He says he grew up in a good Christian home but started smoking pot when he was in high school and slowly slipped in with a bad crowd and bad ways. His drug use escalated and he eventually became a crystal meth user. "It got to the point where crystal meth was like coffee." He tried to kick his drug habit many times but kept sliding back. He finally hit rock bottom when he got into a scrap that left him with an eight-inch knife gash to his arm, still deeply scarred. None of his "friends" came to visit him in the hospital and later only made contact to reach his drug dealer. Welcome Home, he says, has made a huge difference in his life. He plans to stay for a few more months and then hopes to train for a career in auto repair. "They're taking the bottom two per cent of the population and they're making men out of them," he says. "Life is good," he adds. "The possibilities are endless." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek