Pubdate: Thu, 24 May 2007 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant GROUND BROKEN FOR ADDICT HOUSING PROJECT Eighteen months after it was announced, construction of a controversial addict-housing complex officially began Thursday. About 80 dignitaries and supporters of the downtown building attended a ground-breaking ceremony that featured politicians and a former drug addict who once pushed a shopping cart and lived on the street. Today, Robyn Williams has a home, a two-year-old daughter and the satisfaction of beating her mental illness and addiction, she said. "This facility would have been a godsend for me and will be exactly that for many individuals facing similar challenges. It will provide them with . . . a safe place with a key, a sense of dignity, belonging and ownership," said Williams. The three-storey building, with 30 small suites above ground-floor office space, will be built on city-owned land at 1436 St. Paul St. A project of Interior Health and B.C. Housing, Cardington Arms will provide accommodation for people with addictions and/or mental illness who want to get better. Critics say the residents will be allowed to use drugs or alcohol without being evicted. A group of downtown business owners opposed to the project launched a civil action last fall on grounds the city failed to provide public notice that it intended to dispose of city-owned land. B.C. Supreme Court Justice Richard Brooke dismissed the lawsuit. He ruled last week that the city had followed a "transparent" process that involved significant public input in the project. Jim Carta, the opponents' main spokesman, attended Thursday's groundbreaking. He said the likelihood of an appeal is "very remote," but business owners will closely monitor how residents behave in the area. "Yes, there is a homeless problem," he said. "How do you measure success with this facility? . . . The jury will be out on it for at least three years. "Now our role is caretaker." Alan Dolman, board chair of the Interior Health Authority, said any major health-care decision invites controversy. He asked people to imagine being an alcoholic with no home or ability to shower, bathe, eat properly or take medication. "Oh, and at the same time, we'd like you to kick your addiction," he said. "A facility like this will help real people try and become productive members of society. You're not going to save them all. This is never a 100 per cent project. "We as a society deserve to give these people a second chance, a third chance, a fourth chance, to try and get back into the mainstream." The $6.75 million building, expected to open next May, will be managed by the local John Howard Society. Residents must agree to a code of conduct and work toward a tailor-made path to recovery. They can fall off the wagon but repeat drug and alcohol users will be evicted. The federal government is providing $2.25 million, the province will contribute $225,000 a year toward the operation and Interior Health will staff the facility around the clock for $500,000 a year. The city is providing the land, recently assessed at $783,500, for a nominal fee on a 60-year lease. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake