Pubdate: Wed, 08 Aug 2007 Source: Victoria News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Victoria News Contact: http://www.vicnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267 Author: Gregory Hartnell EXCHANGE NEEDLED AIDS Vancouver Island's desire to use ever more public money to pursue the dubious practice of giving injection needles and distilled water to sick street addicts is a deadly, counter-productive policy based on questionable scientific data ("AIDS group pushes addict safe haven," July 25). It is quite telling that your headline writer uses the verb "pushes" to describe this foolish idea, as it is clear that AVI's intention is to expand its little empire, effectively at the expense of the health of these same addicts. Common sense should tell these so-called "harm reduction" militants that their latest proposal to expand these activities at a larger site will only displace the disruption they cause to another location. Then they will very likely be subject to another lawsuit by disgruntled neighbours. AVI officials seem to be in complete denial of the degree to which they are culpable of aggravating the addictions of many desperate addicts. It is not simply a matter of having to put the AVI administrative offices in a different location from the proposed new site, as former AVI executive director Miki Hansen suggests. No neighbours care where the AVI administration shuffles its paper, but they do care that public health and safety are not compromised by the activities of these well-intentioned, but naive people. The Vancouver Island Health Authority would be wise to cut off all funding to AVI immediately, forcing the closure of the Cormorant Street facility. That would make the lawsuit filed by Cormorant and Amelia neighbours redundant, and save AVI thousands in legal fees. It would also force them to admit that VIHA has no confidence in their creepy social-engineering experiment. VIHA could then look at helping fund abstinence-based recovery houses in the affected neighbourhoods, which should be run strictly by recovering addicts with substantial "clean time." Whether or not one agrees with current drug policy at the federal level, it is clear that Prime Minister Harper's government has no intention of allowing a new exemption which would allow addicts to "shoot up inside," as new AVI executive director Katrina Jensen put it. That being so, the City of Victoria, VIHA and the relevant provincial ministries should immediately co-ordinate their efforts to provide proven effective small- and medium-scale abstinence-based recovery houses for those who need and desire treatment now. Everyone knows that the theory of this experiment has proven a dismal failure in practice. AVI officials pretend that they provide a so-called "portal" to treatment, but when there are no real treatment or recovery houses in Victoria to speak of, why pretend any longer? To throw good money after bad, and encourage more of this nonsense, would be the ultimate in cynical folly. Gregory Hartnell, Victoria - --- MAP posted-by: Derek