Pubdate: Mon, 22 Sep 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) INSITE NO BROKEN WINDOW While in British Columbia for an economic conference last week, Rudolph Giuliani pronounced the supervised-injection site in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside a "terrible mistake." Mr. Giuliani's tough-on-crime track record may qualify him to talk about the benefits of vigorous policing but his criticism of Insite is misplaced. Further, it seems inconsistent with the broken-windows theory of policing: the basis for his "zero-tolerance" approach to crime while mayor of New York City. Mr. Giuliani was elected mayor in 1994 partly on his promise to address quality-of-life issues, among them squeegee men, the homeless and panhandlers on New York City streets. He appointed William Bratton as police commissioner. Building upon the broken-windows theory that perceptions of safety are reduced by "untended" behaviour, such as disorderliness or incivility, and that addressing quality-of-life offences will inhibit more serious criminality, they applied a zero-tolerance policy, though the broken-windows theory itself espouses discretionary policing: educating some offenders, warning others and arresting only a few. Although the crime rate in New York dropped substantially, a number of criminologists maintain that the downward trend had less to do with zero tolerance than an increased number of police officers, a strengthening economy (fostering revitalization of neighbourhoods) and a reduction in crack cocaine use. Crack cocaine use in New York was common in the mid-1980s and this cheap, highly addictive and sometimes deadly drug became the focus of the so-called War on Drugs, which by then was predominantly waged through prohibition and law enforcement. Prohibition, however, has not been successful. In 2006, almost half of high school students in the United States report it is very or fairly easy to obtain cocaine. Almost 40 per cent reported having little difficulty obtaining crack cocaine. While Mr. Giuliani is free to claim credit for the reduction of crime rates while he was mayor, his likening of supervised-injection sites to an encouragement of the use of drugs, and his claim that safe-injection sites are "just going to make your drug problem much worse," reveal a lack of awareness of the aim (and achievement) of safe-injection sites. Insite's main purpose is to reduce the spread of infectious disease among intravenous drug users and to offering counselling about rehabilitation - objectives that are consistent with the broken-windows theory. Failure to take steps to reduce disease transmission will lead to greater social ills, much as one broken window left untended results in a building full of broken windows. With all due respect for Mr. Giuliani, who distinguished himself in the aftermath of the collapse of the World Trade Center towers, he and the American war-on-drugs model have no lessons to offer Canada on drug control. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin