Pubdate: Tue, 10 Jul 2007 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2007 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Susan Martinuk Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Note: Susan Martinuk is a Vancouver columnist. 50 YEARS OF DRUG ADDICTION VANCOUVER -'There's trouble in paradise." That's the conclusion of a recent United Nations report on Vancouver's urban population. The city is "breathtakingly gorgeous," but seriously marred by the abject misery of its Downtown Eastside (DES), "? a two-kilometre square stretch of decaying rooming houses, seedy strip bars and shady pawn shops." It's not exactly a startling conclusion. Vancouver is well-known as a living paradox, where the eyesore of the drug-infested DES exists alongside the most pristine beauty nature has to offer. In fact, the UN's words practically mirror those of a CBC-TV report: "Right now in Vancouver's East End, they're taking their fixes. For a few drugged hours, they'll feel OK ? and then they will come to. In 100 shabby dens, dingy hotels and cheap housekeeping rooms, Vancouver's drug-addict population will ask the same old questions. What can I steal today?" The similarities in the descriptions are disturbing -- especially since the CBC report is from 1959. Almost 50 years later, we have made little progress in altering the downward trajectory of life in the DES. Instead, the problem has flourished and the world-wide reputation of the DES as an open-drug society is now legendary. Today, junkies shoot up in the streets or at a government-sponsored injection site. (Ironically, the spokesperson for the injection site is also leading an international initiative to legalize all drugs by 2020.) There's no imperative to stop, limit or even hide drug use when those in charge are determined to give addicts unfettered access. Clearly, the inmate s are running the asylum. In 1959, an addictions doctor says handing out free, legal drugs to addicts is just a "fantasy." Today, that "fantasy" is reality. Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan recently announced a supposedly innovative proposal to supply addicts with legal forms of illegal drugs (heroin, crack cocaine and crystal meth) in pill form. Sullivan naively claims the delivery system is the core of the addiction problem, and is determined to change the drug culture of "depending on needles." This is innovative thinking, indeed. Common sense suggests the drug is the problem, and the culture of drug dependence is what needs to change. And the best way to change an epidemic rooted in a particular behaviour, is to change the behaviour. But common sense isn't "innovative" enough for those who are charged with resolving Vancouver's drug problem, yet obsessed with doing anything they can to facilitate drug use. The success of Sullivan's plan ultimately depends on how that is defined. If the end goal is to give addicts a new chance at life and help them to become functioning members of society, then it will fail. On the other hand, if the end goal is to keep an entire population of humans in a dysfunctional state, consumed by a need for drugs and wandering the streets in pharmaceutical oblivion, then it's exactly what Vancouver needs. Job done. Al Arsenault, a retired DES police officer who has made award-winning documentaries of life there, says the policy is "selling human potential down the road." He knows the addicts by name and says, "They don't need drugs, they need treatment. If Sullivan wants to change the drug culture, he has to fix the addict first." I agree. Harm reduction waves the white flag of surrender, abandons an entire population to a lifetime of despair. The Netherlands continues to deal with the partially living products of its state-sponsored harm reduction programs. It must now provide specialized housing for ageing addicts who, in their 30s and 40s, are experiencing medical problems common to those in their 80s. These "elderly addicts" are maintained on drugs while they wait for death to come. Satisfying the whims of drug addicts won't improve the neighbourhood or Vancouver's international reputation. It won't transform the DES into a safe, prosperous and desirable neighbourhood for businesses and families, or move addicts forward into a real, functional life. History shows that years of compassionate chatter and political solutions (that only give the appearance of doing something) have done little to evoke any real change in the DES. In 1959, there were just four detox beds available. In 2007, there are 23 beds available downtown and only six of those are for women. One organization has another 24 beds ready, but can't get government funding for operating costs. The only way to change Vancouver's drug culture is through treatment. That means detox beds, long-term treatment centres located away from the DES, long-term social support and instruction in life skills and trades. The last thing an addict needs is a substitute drug. It's a pathetic, callous alternative to implementing the meaningful measures that can transform both individuals and the DES into a functioning society. - Susan Martinuk is a Vancouver columnist. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman