Pubdate: Tue, 07 Aug 2007 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Dave Dormer DRUG PROGRAM TOUTED AS CRIMEFIGHTER Properly funding and expanding the Calgary Drug Treatment Court will help curb the seemingly rampant rise of crime and drug use in the city's downtown core, said committee chair Mark Tyndale. The program, which sees selected addicts undergo rehabilitation and job training rather than face prison time, has had just two applicants since the court's first sitting May 10. However, Tyndale said the small number of cases reflects the small percentage of addicts responsible for the bulk of drug-related crimes. "A very small number of hard-core drug addicts, probably in Calgary between 70 and 200, commit a disproportionately high portion of the criminal offences," said the local lawyer, who added the program will ultimately make a dent in drug-fuelled crime "one abuser at a time." Tyndale said many addicts need thousands of dollars per week to fuel their habits and for most, crime is the only way to get it. Crime and drug use have long gone hand-in-hand, he added, but only in recent years has the issue become high-profile in Calgary. "As soon as you put a push on to rehabilitate one area ... addicts simply move on to another area and that happens to be the downtown core right now," said Tyndale. "The reason that is gaining publicity is that's where all the suits go to work and they have to walk across these people on the sidewalk." The two men enrolled in the program qualified because they were facing lengthy sentences for non-violent, drug-related crimes, and will spend an additional 12 months in counselling and rehabilitation. The city has committed $100,000 over the next two years to fund the five-bed program, but Tyndale said it will take financial commitment from the province and feds to make it work long-term. Police Chief Jack Beaton last week lauded the program and its mandatory testing, saying it takes more than just enforcement to break the cycle of addiction and crime. "There are social agencies that deal with (addiction) and we need to engage them," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake