Pubdate: Mon, 31 Dec 2007 Source: Kamloops Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Kamloops Daily News Contact: http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/679 Author: Michele Young KIWANIS HOUSE RESCUED A group of private investors has come forward to keep the city's only residential addiction-treatment facility from closing. "It was a Christmas miracle for sure," executive director Murphy Kennedy said Thursday. Kennedy said six people in Kamloops have banded together and offered temporary financial relief for the non-profit agency. The 37-year-old Kiwanis House, slated to lay off staff on Boxing Day after 'graduating' its last group of six clients last week, has a $400,000 debt and a small contract with Interior Health that wasn't enough to cover the bills. That, coupled with the fact a marketing campaign aimed at attracting paying clients hadn't had enough time to take effect, forced the board to announce it was shutting the doors. The reprieve has allowed Kiwanis to keep its staff on and start booking clients for the next 33-day treatment program that begins in early January. "Staff layoff notices have been rescinded and they have been in full agreement to come back," Kennedy said. "The goal of both the board and this group of individuals is the long term. The discussions haven't gotten underway. Really what there is is an agreement in principle to keep us open and negotiate in good faith a new deal. Whether that means remaining as a society or these individuals purchasing the property is yet to be seen. There will be a meeting in early January to sort that all out," he explained. "One thing that's for sure is we are all agreed that Kiwanis House is open for business and will remain that way." The investors want to remain anonymous at this time, he said. Kiwanis did lose one of its 15 employees after layoff notices were issued two weeks ago. Kennedy said that was a matter of timing - the staffer had to make a decision and went ahead with another job before it was known that a deal was being struck with the investors. So far, there are eight clients booked to fill Kiwanis's 21 beds on Jan. 6. Three of those beds are funded by the Interior Health Authority, whose contract with the agency expires March 31. Last spring, the non-profit group and Interior Health agreed, for the most part, to go their separate ways. IHA had wanted Kiwanis to provide supportive housing - a place for recovering addicts to get food and shelter, with counselling services provided elsewhere. IHA said it was shifting to a harm-reduction model, whereby clients who slipped up and used drugs or alcohol would be removed from the contracted facility for a short period of time, but could re-enter the program. Kiwanis wanted to stay with its historical program, with an emphasis on even more intensive treatment. As a result, the spring announcement said IHA would go from funding all 21 beds to covering the cost of three. Kiwanis said it planned on marketing itself to private paying customers to fill the other beds. The three-bed contract with Interior Health expires March 31, 2008. Interior Health established a 30-bed contract with New Life Mission and House of Ruth to provide supportive housing. Those who need it can get access to an addictions counsellor off site. Kennedy noted there was obviously not going to be any political help in changing Interior Health's shift to saving Kiwanis's abstinence program. "The minister of health has spoken quite clearly. And he's stated he was not interested in abstinence-based, intense treatment and he would not intervene," he said. "IHA is not elected. Our MLAs and the minister of health are elected. But it seems that they're unable or unwilling. . . . I'm saying the same thing everyone else is - 'Wow, IHA has a lot of power to decide.' " He felt Krueger and Richmond should have talked to some of the people who deal with addictions in Kamloops beyond Interior Health to get a feel for what services the community needs. "I don't think there was a fair canvassing of the addictions physicians in town, the employers, the employee assistance program managers in the region," he said. "There's just another opinion out there that's very strong - obviously, because these six (investors) have put their money into it." While Kiwanis is now staying open, it will be paying clients who will be the focus. The three publicly funded IHA beds might not be renewed after March 31. Those three beds, often used by people on welfare or with no means to pay, have been full since last spring when IHA changed its contract with Kiwanis. Kennedy said now that there's a solid financial footing for Kiwanis, the marketing effort will move forward again. "We'll continue on with our marketing as is. Depending how things go, there would certainly need to be more marketing done," he said. "I don't know how things are going to turn out but I am confident this group of six is in it for the long term." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart