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 LAWSUIT NEEDLES MAYOR Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe warns downtown's problems could become a lot worse if the cash-strapped needle-exchange must use its limited money and time fighting legal action by area businesses and residents. A suit aimed at shutting down the downtown needle exchange was filed in B.C. Supreme Court Thursday afternoon. "It doesn't help the needle exchange when they have to use their money and time to defend the injunction," Lowe said. "That will just mean less dollars to operate the needle exchange, which could mean even more problems in that area." Fifteen plaintiffs who live and work near the Cormorant Street service - -- where up to 2,000 addicts trade dirty needles for clean ones -- claim the program is a nuisance. Victoria lawyer Stewart Johnston, whose Amelia Street law firm is off Cormorant, supports an expanded and properly run service, but said he's fed up waiting for change. AIDS Vancouver Island is funded by the Vancouver Island Health Authority. "If they are going to do it, they should do it right," Johnston said. "Right now, it's a half-hearted measure that draws addicts to our neighbourhood." With no enclosed outdoor area for them to go, homeless addicts loiter outside, urinate, defecate and leave behind a trail of dirty syringes, blood and human waste around Cormorant Street, he said. Danielle Topliss, a lawyer in his firm, said in a community forum hosted by A-Channel television station yesterday that the only people benefiting from the underfunded and underserviced program are drug dealers. AIDS Vancouver Island operates its seven-day, two-person needle exchange on a $250,000 budget. The agency said its funding has been frozen since the early 1990s, despite a huge spike in demand. Since 1996, the number of syringes distributed has jumped to one million from 128,000, and clients have increased to 2,000 from 545, according to the agency. It wants $585,000 -- more than double its current operating budget -- to run an expanded needle exchange in a new location, possibly Rock Bay. The expanded site would include a supervised 50-person drop-in centre, courtyard, toilets, showers, kitchen, counsellors' offices and storage space. Despite the legal action, Katrina Jensen, AIDS Vancouver Island's director of programs, said the service has broad support. "I cannot see us being shut down," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek