Pubdate: Sat, 22 Mar 2008 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Cindy E. Harnett NO HOME FOR NEEDLE EXCHANGE - WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? With an eviction pending on its current site and outraged neighbours fighting a move to a new location, the health authority has little choice but to switch to a mobile service Cindy E. Harnett Times Colonist The Vancouver Island Health Authority's plan to provide Victoria drug users with clean needles through a mobile service -- because it can't find a new permanent location -- will only drive drug users to other neighbourhoods and increase the problem, a prominent drug expert says. "The bottom line of your problem -- in terms of health, social and behavioural problems -- will in no way be smaller. ... You'll have more problems than less," said Benedikt Fischer, at the University of Victoria's Centre for Addiction Research B.C. The health authority announced this week it has backed off its plan to move the needle exchange to the St. John Ambulance building at 941 Pandora Ave. The exchange has been evicted from its Cormorant Street location as of May 31. VIHA had faced outrage from parents at the nearby private St. Andrew's Elementary School, who feared for their children's safety and decried the lack of consultation. But the decision means VIHA is left with few options other than to make the exchange a mobile service. "We have nowhere else to go," said VIHA president Howard Waldner. Indeed, VIHA really has just three choices: Stick with the Pandora location, but consult with neighbours and develop a plan to make it work (even though it's not obliged to do so as the building has the appropriate zoning for a needle exchange); operate as a mobile service only; or find an entirely new location and likely face similar backlash from people in that area. The needle exchange is funded by VIHA and operated by AIDS Vancouver Island. It serves about 1,500 drug addicts, and has been increasingly controversial because users loiter outside the Cormorant Street location in large groups, leaving behind dirty syringes, blood and human waste. AIDS Vancouver Island said it was trying to clean up the problem, but needed a bigger space -- hence, the new, larger Pandora location. The site was chosen because it's next to the newly built Our Place, which offers transitional housing and programs for the homeless. The St. John building would house about 50 health-care and social-service providers, as well as the needle exchange. Originally, the city of Victoria was behind the idea. Mayor Alan Lowe said the city was giving VIHA $100,000 toward the $2-million purchase price of the St. John building -- but he changed his opinion this week and "commended" VIHA's reversal. "We must take pro-active steps to locate facilities with integrated services in locations that work, but not to [be] reckless in our choice of locations," Lowe wrote in an e-mail to the Times Colonist while on vacation. Yet even some of the drug users on Cormorant Street recognize it's time for change. "People here are starting to get the idea they are screwing things up for their peers," said one man, noting that a number of addicts already congregate in the Pandora Avenue location. "[It] would probably make things cleaner," he said. Katrina Jensen, executive director of AIDS Vancouver Island, hopes that with further community consultation -- and improved plans from her organization, the police and VIHA -- the Pandora Avenue location can still be considered. "We'd like to see if there's a way we can figure out to deliver those services in a way that might actually improve the problems in the neighbourhood," Jensen said. "If there's a way for the community to give us a chance ... that's basically what we want to do." She said AIDS Vancouver Island believes a fixed location, and not a mobile service, is the answer, so users can have access to services. Provincial Health Officer Perry Kendall believes VIHA could still locate the needle exchange on Pandora, with proper consultation. He notes that with 22 needle exchanges in Canada since 1987, he's not aware of a child ever being harmed, except by finding a discarded needle. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek