Pubdate: Fri, 16 Mar 2007 Source: City Journal (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Media Transcontinental Contact: http://www.cityjournal.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4391 Author: Jim Donnelly Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) ADDICTS, SEX WORKERS AND ACADEMICS DISCUSS CITY 'HARM REDUCTION' POLICY Michelle Ball isn't clean and sober, and doesn't apologize for a second. "I continue to be a drug user," said the local HIV educator with the AIDS Committee of Ottawa. The dirty-blonde mother of one was part of a panel discussion about the city's harm reduction policies Thursday, March 8 at Bronson Centre. "I'm going to be completely honest here," continued the former crack user-turned social worker. "Most of my drug use was pretty damn fun And I still enjoy drugs. I smoke drugs, and I enjoy pharmaceuticals. It's quite fun. It's like exercise for some people." A motley collection of former sex workers, drug users and academics gathered in the centre's Nepean Room for a frank discussion on the City of Ottawa's harm reduction policy and how it relates to local sex workers. Organized by local human rights lawyer Yavar Hameed, it featured a panel drawn from across the activist spectrum -- Ball was joined by Carleton University assistant law professor Dawn Moore, Samantha Smyth of the Canadian National Coalition of Experiential Women, and manager of the Vancouver Safe Injection Site program Jeff West. All agreed Mayor Larry O'Brien's pledge to eliminate or scale back harm reduction programs, which include needle exchanges and the free distribution of crack pipes, is misguided. "The war on drugs has been the single greatest factor in historical spikes of women being incarcerated," said Moore, adding that public health and law enforcement rarely work together to solve social problems. When women sex workers are stigmatized, she said, they're forced to the margins of society. "And life on those margins can be quite rough," she added. "This creates a culture that disregards a woman's right to security." Smyth agreed. She said most women fall into drug dependencies as a way of dealing with life on the streets, which often leads to some kind of sex work. "From the experience we have, most women get into sex work first," she said. "They start using drugs as a coping mechanism." As their addictions ramp up, she said, sex work becomes an even more appealing option to pay for drugs, and the vicious cycle begins. The City of Ottawa's current harm reduction policy is predicated on the assumption that people make questionable moral choices, but that the end result of such choices -- HIV or Hepatitis infection, for example -- is a major public health issue that must be addressed. As such the city offers a variety of harm reduction programs including health education, counseling, access to sterile hypodermic needles (along with their safe disposal), immunizations, blood testing and access to condoms. The city offers numerous drop-boxes for used needles, and advises people to drop them off in one-litre plastic containers. But Moore said the typical "four pillar" approach to combating drug problems (prevention, treatment, harm reduction and enforcement) is failing in Ottawa, thanks to an emphasis on law enforcement to the detriment of other aspects. "So what happens is the roof collapses," she said, "and you have an incoherent drug strategy. And that's what's happening here in Ottawa." Ball agreed, adding that she was eventually rescued by Ottawa's harm reduction programs after years on the streets as a cocaine-based drug abuser. She said lived a marginalized existence because of her drug use, and many times didn't know where to turn for help. "Most of the sexual harassment I received was from cops," she said. "They used my addictions against me. "But what harm reduction (programs) did for me was, I'm still here," she said. "I'm still alive. And I think I deserve to be." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake