Pubdate: Fri, 18 Jan 2008 Source: Prince George Free Press (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.pgfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2135 Author: Arthur Williams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) NEW HOPE FOR DRUG ADDICTS Drug and alcohol addicts in Western Canada now have a new option to help them in their recovery. Baldy Hughes Therapeutic Community officially opened Monday. The addictions recovery community is based on a former air force base on Blackwater Road, 40 km southwest of Prince George. Vancouver-Burrard MLA Lorne Mayencourt was the driving force behind the innovative addictions recovery community, which is based on the community of San Patrignano, Italy. "It's been a leap of faith. I'm really glad it's happening," Mayencourt said. "There is great things happening here." Since 1978, recovering addicts have lived and worked in San Patrignano. While there, they develop job skills, life skills, self-reliance, a sense of dignity and community, Mayencourt said. Residents stay for three years or more - as opposed to conventional addictions recovery programs which last about six weeks. University studies have shown 72 per cent of residents who complete the program stay drug-free and 71 per cent end up working in the field they trained in there. Currently 1,700 people live at San Patrignano, which is funded entirely by private donations and the profits of its own industries. Baldy Hughes is the first recovery community of its kind in North America. Mayencourt raised the private funds to open the centre and brought the first four residents there on Dec. 2. "Right now we've got eight people in here and are bringing in four more this week," Mayencourt said. "From that point on we'll bring in 12 people a month. We'll probably be at 150 by the end of this year." Residents will come for a 30-day orientation, then will work with staff to decide if they want to sign an agreement to stay for three years, he said. The eventual goal is to have 500 residents living and working in the community. The first residents will be working on renovating the buildings on site and building furniture to house future generations of residents, he said. "We've contacted an electrician from Prince George who's going to take on two [residents] as apprentices," he said. "What we're looking to do is not have people do the work for us, but to teach people how to do it. What these guys need to learn is how to be self-sufficient." Mayencourt is still working to find private donations to make the community work. "We're going to need $1.5 million this year," he said. "[But] over the course of the next first three years we hope to earn 50 per cent form our industries and work." Baldy Hughes executive director Jaret Clay said the community will be working with social agencies in Prince George to deliver services to its residents. "Right now we're trying to focus on people who have been clean for a bit of time. The ideal candidate would have been through treatment, but wants help staying clean. Here you have a place to practice what you learned in treatment in a safe environment," Clay said. "Our hope is to eventually bring detox on site. But we would need medical supports in place to do that." Peer support worker and recovery addict Robert Marwick appeared proud of the facility and what it's residents have achieved in a short period of time as he toured visiting media around the site. "We've got quite a good deal here," Marwick said. "There used to be 300 people on base and another 200 who came in from town. [And] it was just sitting here practically empty." The site includes a well-appointed lounge, dining hall, two-lane bowling alley, curling rink, outdoor skating rink, ski hill, cross-country skiing trails, full-size gymnasium, class rooms, dorm-style housing, carpentry shop, mechanical garage, fire hall and campgrounds. Marwick came to Baldy Hughes from a recovery centre in Vancouver. "We were doing outreach to people in sleeping in doorways in Vancouver. The big cities have so many resources for people who have addictions." he said. "[But] the biggest thing about this place is it gives people a sense of purpose. Most of us had nothing to feel proud about when we were addicts. I like seeing people change day by day, that's my new high." Resident Ken Young said the group support from his peers made the difference for him. "It's great here - just what we need," Young said. A resident who asked not to be named said hearing about Baldy Hughes was what made him decide to seek treatment. "I'm the first Prince George resident that was brought out here. I saw a documentary on San Patrignano on CBC awhile ago. I thought since this is based on that, I'd try it. I detoxed out here," he said. "I was involved in the local drug trade for 12 years. I got sick of being sick." He said his parents knew he had a heroin problem for years, but didn't know how to help him. "Sobriety - to be drug free. That's all our goals," he said. "I'm trying to get some skills to stay away from drugs." Another resident said he has struggled to stay clean for 35 years. "I'd been on a run for the last four years. You spend all your money, then you start doing things that normally you wouldn't do to keep your addiction going," he said. "I reached a point where I realized I've got to do something or end up dead or in jail." Fifteen years ago he tried a rehab facility in New Westminister, but struggled to stay away from drugs. "It was only a six-week thing. It's not a long enough period," he said. "[And] I'd leave the rehab and in five minutes I was down by the Skytrain station and could get any drugs at a real cheap price. You get these sudden urges, but it it's not available it passes." For more information, contact the facility at 250-964-3136. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom