Pubdate: Sat, 29 Dec 2007 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Randy Shore MLA OPENS DRUG DETOX CENTRE Lorne Mayencourt Hopes To Have 100 Recovering Addicts In Treatment By The End Of Next Year PRINCE GEORGE - MLA Lorne Mayencourt has quietly opened a rural drug treatment facility near Prince George. New Hope already has five clients living on a decommissioned U.S. military base about a 10-hour drive from Vancouver. It is not due to open officially until mid-January. Mayencourt hopes to have 100 clients living in refurbished Cold War-era buildings by the end of next year. The recovering addicts will do much of the construction themselves -- hard work and acquiring job skills being part of the program. The 65-hectare former Baldy Hughes air force base will, over the course of the next year, be transformed into a community for recovering drug addicts modelled on the San Patrignano facility in Italy, which houses 2,000 addicts, some of them for several years during their recovery. Like San Patrignano, Mayencourt expects New Hope to be at least partly self-supporting. Clients will train and work in the automotive shop and learn carpentry, building furniture and other products for sale. Unlike the city's harm-reduction projects, needle exchanges, drug substitution programs and supervised injection sites, New Hope clients will move away from the temptations of urban life, give up drugs and stay off drugs. "Over the last several years my focus has really shifted into areas of addictions, mental health and homelessness," said Mayencourt, who will not run again when his term ends in 2009. He believes that New Hope is the best way he can effect solutions to those problems. "I was thinking to myself about what else I wanted to do at the provincial level and this is it," he said. And he is thinking big. "I want to put all my energy into [New Hope]," he said. "We want to build a community of 500 recovering addicts." The base consists of six barracks, a large-scale kitchen and mess, gym, ice rink and industrial shops. "There are 23 buildings in all and the restaurant is open for our use now," he said. The buildings are solidly constructed, though a little short on insulation, something the tiny crew is working to address while they refinish the interiors and reactivate ancient heating systems. "It will take years to redevelop the site, but that's okay," he said. "We want that to be part of people's recovery program." Mayencourt says his clients have to battle addiction, but they also tend to arrive with little education or interpersonal skills, all of which must be addressed before they can be expected to survive in the world after treatment. New Hope is open to adult men and women. Mayencourt admits that he has been approached about running for Vancouver city council by persons that he will not name and by federal conservative MP John Reynolds about taking a run at Hedy Fry's seat in Vancouver Centre. "Timing will really dictate whether I take any of that on," Mayencourt said. Timing, and assurances that he will be able to pursue substantive work in homelessness and addiction. First elected as the MLA for Vancouver-Burrard in 2001, Mayencourt has created sparks during his tenure. An altercation with a homeless man left Mayencourt with a bruised face and made him the subject of a special prosecutor's investigation. Mayencourt regrets that he "lost control" of the situation and ended up accused of assaulting the man, "when, in fact, it was the other way around." "That was a hard lesson, but that guy is now a very good friend of mine," Mayencourt said. "He's in recovery and we have since had some pretty good laughs over that experience." Mayencourt drew the ire of anti-poverty groups for his private member's bill that came to be known as the Safe Streets Act, which targeted aggressive panhandlers and squeegee kids. "There has been some research that shows that Safe Streets had a really positive impact in downtown Vancouver and also in Kelowna and Prince George," he said. He's not done yet as an MLA. Mayencourt is working on a bill that will help medical and engineering professionals, among others, with foreign credentials gain recognition from local professional colleges and accreditation agencies. TILMA, the Trade, Investment and Labour Mobility Agreement recently signed by B.C. and Alberta, provides the blueprint for Mayencourt's bill. "There are some roadblocks that need to be removed," Mayencourt said. "They need to start to view people with foreign credentials as assets rather than liabilities." Mayencourt is confident that he and his constituency office staff will be able to keep up with the demands of his duties as an MLA and serve his constituents while he gets New Hope up and running. "They've been with me for six years, so they know the ropes and we have good relationships with the provincial and federal bureaucracies to help people when they are in trouble," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek