Pubdate: Tue, 07 Aug 2007 Source: Richmond News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007, Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.richmond-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1244 Author: Nelson Bennett Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) ROAD TO RECOVERY AT TURNING POINT Dave doesn't look like a typical crack addict. A tennis instructor and university graduate, he started smoking crack about a year-and-a-half ago. It didn't take long to hit bottom. Before he decided to get clean, he was virtually homeless and had been in jail twice. "I didn't sleep on the streets or in a box or anything like that," he says. "But I was homeless. I had people after me because I owed them money." Now 80 days clean and sober, he credits the Turning Point recovery house in Richmond for helping him stay clean and relearn basic life skills. Without it, he says: "I'd still be on the streets." "One of the biggest obstacles to long-term recovery is supportive housing," says Brenda Plant, executive director of Turning Point Recovery Society. The society wants to expand its Richmond facilities by adding 40 beds of supportive and second-stage housing at 8180 Ash St. on the site of a former group home for troubled teens. "It will be controversial," said Jack Clerkson, the consultant handling the proposal. "It already is." Then again, so was the Odlin Road house when Turning Point first occupied it in 1999. "There was a large public outcry when we moved here," Plant said. "We have been a good neighbour since we've been here." Of the 2,000-plus clients who have passed though Turning Point's doors in its Richmond and Vancouver facilities over the last 25 years, the society estimates 75 per cent were still clean and sober a year after they left. Steve is one of them. A former drunk and drug addict, he has been clean and sober for more than six years and now makes a living as a golf pro. After hitting bottom and doing out-patient treatment, the born and raised Richmondite came to the Odlin Road home in 2001 and stayed for three months. He said he needed Turning Point's supportive environment to help him reintegrate. "A lot of the first year is about taking care of the wreckage," he said. "My finances were a mess. It was like doing everything for the first time." The nine-bed Odlin Road home is one of three homes operated by Turning Point. The other two are in Vancouver. Participants typically stay for up to three months. They take turns cooking and all have chores. They attend daily 12 Step meetings and also take lifestyles workshops. Unlike a structured treatment centre, Turning Point offers the freedom to come and go during the day. Plant says there are no safe injection facilities and no methadone patients at Turning Point's recovery houses. Turning Point's $6.2-million expansion plan calls for three new buildings on Ash Street. It includes two two-storey homes to be used as supportive housing -- one for men and one for women. Clients would typically stay up to three months. Another 20-bed "second-stage" apartment-style housing centre would offer longer-term support. Clients would stay for up to a year in self-contained studio apartments. They would be required to work or be in school and attend regular 12 Step meetings. There would be a live-in centre manager. Neighbours of the proposed expansion worry about having recovering addicts living next door to them, and just one block from an elementary school. They say they had several bad experiences with the teen group home that used to operate there. But the irony, according to supporters of the recovery centre, is that society in general is safer when addicts and alcoholics get help than when they are left to their own devices. Richmond RCMP Supt. Ward Clapham said supportive recovery like that offered by Turning Point is critical to fighting drug addiction and the crime that results from it. "Richmond RCMP believe the only way to truly reduce crime and disorder is by tackling problems at the root and engaging in a long-term, holistic approach," Clapham said. "Housing, treatment and recovery are all major factors if we are really going to solve the problem. "Those recovering from addiction need our support -- otherwise, they may fall back into a cycle of addiction and possible crime and disorder." Every dollar spent on recovery pays huge dividends, Plant said -- about $6,000 to $12,000 per year in policing and health-care costs for every person who stays clean. "We had a guy last year who, in the six months preceding his arrival at Turning Point, had been to emergency 18 times," Plant said. "I am happy to report he is a working, contributing member of society." Turning Point's proposal will require rezoning, which is expected to go forward in the fall. For more information on the proposal, visit www.turningpointrecovery.com. For information on neighbourhood concerns, visit www.tprs.info. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake