Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jun 2007 Source: Georgia Straight, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Georgia Straight Contact: http://www.straight.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1084 Author: Matthew Burrows Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) MORE INSITES NOT ON AGENDA Mayor Sam Sullivan says he considers Vancouver's supervised injection site "an absolutely vital part" of his overall drug strategy. However, he won't commit to pushing for more sites beyond the current one on East Hastings Street. "Well, my main focus right now is keeping the one we've got open," Sullivan told the Georgia Straight in a phone interview. "I know that Mayor [Alan] Lowe in the City of Victoria is trying to get a safe-injection site open in Victoria, without success. I think the objective, first things first, would be to maintain the existing one." Sullivan praised the four-year-old Insite, the first supervised drug-injection site in North America. "I consider Insite an absolutely vital part of the CAST [Chronic Addiction Substitution Treatment] initiative," he said. "Insite will be a very important recruiting site to get people into substitution treatment." Federal Conservative Health Minister Tony Clement did not approve a renewal of a three-year Health Canada exemption for supervised injection of drugs at Insite last year. Instead, he put off any decision about the site until December 31. Sullivan has not promoted a second injection site in the interim, despite the fact that harm-reduction advocates have been calling for another one for years. Ann Livingston, executive program director with the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, told the Straight she still supports opening more sites. "You constantly hear that we should just fight for the one we've got," she said. "Why? The chances are slim for a second site right now, but they are slim because the government won't open one. The fact is there is a ton of drug use continuing, but they [governments] are not the ones up to their elbows in shit-infested alleys." Portland Hotel Society executive director Mark Townsend's staff operate the site in partnership with Vancouver Coastal Health. Last September, Townsend told the Straight: "In the Downtown Eastside, you'd probably need three [sites]." In a June 12 phone interview, Townsend said he is "disappointed" that the second site has fallen off the radar. "It is disappointing that the concept of a second site is not being debated," he said. "It's also disappointing that the concept of detox on demand and prevention and all those things are not getting debated either. It's not just the one thing, you know? It's disappointing that we can't have a comprehensive national strategy." Sullivan said he favours substituting prescribed pills for illegal drugs for addicts. But he denied recent media reports that he is willing to sacrifice the future of Insite, located on East Hastings Street, to get his ideas off the ground. Sullivan denied Vancouver Courier columnist Allen Garr's recent comments that "it looks like Sullivan is willing to sacrifice it [Insite], in spite of its success and broad public support". "In fact, I believe I had a very important role with all of the other people who worked hard to get the extension for the site," Sullivan said. "I met in Ottawa with numerous people, including the prime minister and the ministers, to appeal to having an extension, and I intend to continue making the case in Ottawa." A comprehensive national strategy is part of Sullivan's wish list, following his announcement on June 6 that he will reconvene the City of Vancouver's Four Pillars Coalition for a strategic planning session next month. According to the mayor's office, there will also be a progress report on Project Civil City and the Four Pillars Strategy initiated by former mayor Philip Owen. (The four "pillars" are prevention, treatment, harm reduction, and enforcement.) "We will be doing some strategic planning to secure the additional three-and-a-half years that the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority is seeking [for Insite]," Sullivan said. Last November, when he unveiled Project Civil City, Sullivan stated that one of his recommendations was to reconfigure the Four Pillars Coalition "to ensure that public disorder becomes a main area of focus over the next 24 months". - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath