Pubdate: Wed, 30 May 2007 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Dan Gardner, The Ottawa Citizen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/InSite (InSite) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) LIBERAL OR TORY, DRUG POLICIES REMAIN THE SAME Have you heard the news? Stephen Harper thinks he's Ronald Reagan. "The Conservative government is set to launch a regressive war on drugs," a Liberal press release says. The war is scheduled to start this week, when the government releases a new National Drug Strategy that will -- according to a report in this newspaper last week -- get tough on drugs. More law enforcement. More treatment and prevention. But less "harm reduction" -- including the end of support for "Insite," Vancouver's safe-injection facility. And so the lines have been drawn. On one side, those who say they are defending the liberal Canadian approach against a Reagan-era war on drugs. On the other, those who say the liberal Canadian approach amounts to government aiding and abetting drug use and must be replaced by a strong effort to stop use before it starts. As emotionally satisfying as it would be to have a good bash at the Tories, I'm afraid I can't. It's not that they're right. They're not. Insite and other harm-reduction policies are supported by extensive peer-reviewed research. The government's preferred package -- more enforcement, tougher sentences, more treatment and prevention -- has failed ever since Richard Nixon's White House first assembled it back in the days when disco was cutting edge. To anyone familiar with the history of drug policy, it is bleakly funny to listen to the Tories enthusiastically repeat musty old platitudes as if they were a brainstorm Stephen Harper had in the shower this morning. But there's nothing surprising in this. Ignoring research, evidence and logic is what the Tories do. So now they're going to do it some more. Ho-hum. More interesting are the fantasies on the other side. Take that Liberal press release. "All the research suggests that an ideologically motivated war on drugs is ineffective," it says, "while programs such as the safe-injection site are producing positive results." It then quotes Liberal health critic Bonnie Brown boasting that "the previous Liberal government gave $500,000 a year to the safe-injection site." Golly, what a humane, thoughtful bunch those Liberals are. They gave $500,000 a year to Insite. And they are totally opposed to Harper's stupid war on drugs. They've read the research. They know the score, man. But wait. I seem to recall something about how the Liberal government budgeted money for drug policy. Oh yes. Back in 2001, Auditor General Sheila Fraser released a report on that very subject. Ms. Fraser discovered that the government didn't have any precise goals it wanted to accomplish. And it didn't have any way of measuring whether it was achieving those goals. And it didn't actually know how much it was spending to achieve the goals it hadn't set and couldn't measure. So Ms. Fraser's staff put together some numbers and came up with an estimate of how much the government was spending. Total: $500 million a year. Ms. Fraser also had the novel idea that it would be good if we knew what the money was actually being spent on. At the time, the Liberals liked to say their government took a "balanced approach" on drugs -- which meant an equal focus on enforcement, treatment, prevention and harm reduction -- but Ms. Fraser discovered that 90 per cent of the $500 million a year went to enforcement alone. Sit on a stool balanced like that and you're likely to get a concussion. So let's do some cipherin'. On the whole drug file, the government spent $500 million a year, with 90 per cent of that money going to police and prisons. By my calculation -- and I admit I'm no math whiz - -- the $500,000 a year the Liberals gave Insite was approximately equal to the square root of one-half the Mounties' boot-polish budget. Give or take a shine or two. Incidentally, these numbers account only for federal spending on drug policy. Most prosecutions and incarcerations are paid for by the provinces. A Senate committee estimated Canada's total annual spending on drug policy was in the neighbourhood of $1 billion, with the vast majority going to the Miami Vice side of things. These numbers make it clear that Canada's gentler approach to drug policy is a fairy tale told by the ignorant to the gullible. The core drug policy of the last government involved arrests, punishments and police boasts about record drug seizures that accomplish absolutely nothing. It was the same policy as the government before it, and the government before that one, and so on, in an unbroken chain of failure and willful blindness stretching back nine decades to the introduction of Prohibition. The conductors change but the dirge remains the same. Don't get me wrong. I support harm-reduction programs. They save lives. But despite all the attention they get, they have never been anything more than earrings on an elephant. If Stephen Harper scraps harm reduction, he will make it more likely that some very weak people will die. He will shift the rhetoric. And he'll save a few dollars he can use to pay for strip searches and other things that excite conservatives. But he won't be launching a war on drugs. That war began long, long ago. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake