Pubdate: Fri, 08 Jun 2007 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Allen Garr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) MAYOR SACRIFICING INJECTION SITE Dr. David Marsh couldn't believe what he was hearing when he was told that Mayor Sam Sullivan was prepared to shut down Vancouver's supervised injection site if the Tories would let his drug substitution program get off the ground. Sullivan has lobbied for the drug substitution idea in Ottawa for more than a year. His solution to addiction is substituting prescription pills for illegal stimulants including crystal meth and cocaine. Even though all the research claims the injection site is a successful harm reduction tool, Stephen Harper's new Tory government doesn't like it. It was an idea supported by the Liberals. It involved the use of illegal drugs. Harper's Minister of Health, Tony Clement, has looked for reasons to shut down the site. Last year he gave it an 18-month reprieve until December while asking for more research. I'm told the research is yet to get under way. Sullivan's plan, while untested in any significant way, is incredibly ambitious. He says it will involve 1,000 addicts. The NAOMI Heroin trials in Vancouver has about 180 addicts. Sullivan once again excluded city staff when he decided to proceed with his scheme to develop a proposal the Tories might buy. He created a private charity, the Inner Change Society. He hand-picked the executive director, Lois Johnson, a longtime Tory who worked on Clement's unsuccessful leadership bid. He appointed the board of directors, including Dr. Don Rix, one of his wealthy donors, Tory heavyweight John Reynolds and NDP trophy Joy MacPhail. He personally raised seed money for the society and hired the PR firm Reputations, run by his close confidante Wayne Hartrick, to help launch the project. (Reputations is one of two PR firms Sullivan regularly uses. The other is Norman Stowe's Pace Group. Pace launched Sullivan's Civil City Project. Taxpayers paid that bill.) Sullivan also put together the project's clinical advisory committee. The chair of that committee is Marsh, who also works for Vancouver Coastal Health and is the supervisor of the supervised injection site. Marsh's committee has so far briefly sketched out five drug trials as part of its proposal. It has not discussed these proposals with the society's board of directors, not that that makes any difference. Nothing will go forward unless Sullivan signs off on it. When I told Marsh about Sullivan's recent comments that he would "never" see the injection site as a "long term solution," Marsh said that those comments were something Sullivan said months ago. But Marsh said shutting down the site once the substitution program was underway was discussed and rejected. It was now "off the table." In fact, Sullivan's comments were made late last week. Marsh has no idea how fundraising is going for the drug trials. The public has no right to know how much has been collected or who is supporting this project. As for Johnson, the executive director, she planned to bail out on May 1, but is hanging around until a substitute is found. Marsh is not the only one surprised by Sullivan's comments. Ray Hall, one of the founders of the West Side group From Grief to Action-composed of parents of addicts-predicted a "furor" over Sullivan's admission. "We always knew where he was coming from," he said of Sullivan. "Now we have it in print." The supervised injection site is at the heart of everything former mayor Philip Owen worked for in his Four Pillars Approach to drug addiction. His successor, Larry Campbell, worked passionately to get it up and running. Now it looks like Sullivan is willing to sacrifice it, in spite of its success and broad public support. All so he can rebrand the drug policy as his own with a project that is untested but more palatable to his Tory buddies. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath