Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jul 2007 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Cindy E. Harnett CHAMBER OPPOSES SUPERVISED DRUG SITES Proponents Forgetting About Crime Factor, Says Chief Executive The Greater Victoria Chamber of Commerce is adamantly opposed to a proposed supervised drug-consumption site in the city and is taking on the mayor, police chief and health officials who support it. Bruce Carter, chamber chief executive officer, issued a statement yesterday saying limited health care dollars should be spent on addiction treatment services and drug enforcement, rather than propping up the illegal activities of users and dealers. "The community has been crying for increased detox facilities for years," said Carter, whose board, representing 1,500 members, has voted against the proposed sites. "That would serve the wider good of the community." Greater Victoria is home to an estimated 2,000 injection-drug users -- most of whom use heroin and cocaine -- as well as hundreds of others who ingest or smoke drugs, according to the Centre for Addictions Research of B.C. "It's all well and good to provide supervised injection sites for addicts to consume drugs, but that's forgetting that for every consumption there is a crime," Carter said. The supervised drug-consumption sites would provide clean needles and a supervised place to use them, but not the drugs themselves. Addicts would still have to turn to drug dealers for their supply. Advocates for drug consumption sites say they can help save money for the health-care system by reducing overdoses and the spread of infectious diseases. Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe said regardless of whether the city provides a site, hard-core addicts will continue to use and buy drugs. "I'm not surprised the chamber has come out against supervised injection sites -- it has always had a difficult time accepting that we have to try new methods of reaching the most vulnerable members of society," Lowe said. The business leaders are going up against support from the City of Victoria, Victoria Police Department, the Vancouver Island Health Authority and the B.C. Health Ministry. The federal Conservative government, which must approve the sites, is cool to the concept. "I think the person pushing the uphill battle, quite honestly, is the mayor and VIHA, not the chamber," Carter said. The City of Victoria announced June 26 that it will apply to Health Canada by December to operate, as a three-year research project, multiple sites where supervised addicts could shoot up -- and possibly also smoke or ingest drugs. Victoria will ask the federal government for an exemption from the Controlled Drug and Substances Act to operate the sites. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek