Pubdate: Wed, 23 Apr 2008 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Kelly Egan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) CRACKING OPEN OTTAWA'S DRUG PROBLEM At a public meeting Monday evening, a crowd of roughly 100 assembled to talk about the city's street-drug problem, a persistent ill visibly afflicting our downtown. Organized by the Ottawa Police Services Board, it was attended by a smattering of city councillors, a handful of senior police officers and a number of community groups. Much was said during the two-hour session. One remark, tellingly, drew the loudest cheer. "We cancelled the crack-pipe program," said Mayor Larry O'Brien, acknowledging drug addiction as a "complicated, difficult" problem and citing the need for a teen residential treatment centre. "This is not just a fight," the mayor said. "It is a war." The crack-pipe program, in fact, has never gone away, though it was forced to find alternate funding after the city withdrew its annual contribution of roughly $7,500. No matter. It still makes for good politics, better optics. And this is the jam we're in. Few issues facing the city today cause such a deep divide or lead to a bigger emotional reaction than the response of public agencies to drug addiction. It is a muddle. On provincial orders, we give needles and crack kits to drug addicts, in the name of harm reduction. It is a counter-intuitive step -- with the power to horrify -- but supported by solid medical evidence. The needles, by the hundreds, are discarded on streets, parks, school yards and alleyways. So, a harm-reduction program becomes a public hazard and -- to visitors to the capital -- a potential embarrassment. This is not good. The city then hires someone to pick them up, though many are missed. City Hall then begins to feel the heat from moms finding them in the park. Meanwhile, infection rates among Ottawa intravenous addicts -- the whole point for the harm reduction strategy -- are among the highest in Canada. So what gives? The addicts, 3,000 to 5,000 strong, are committing crimes to support their habit, turning to prostitution, panhandling aggressively, and using drugs in quasi-public places or in crack houses. Crack, we are told, is cheaper than beer. The police, meanwhile, are in the middle of it all: called to every problem along the food chain, from vagrancy to grow-ops to crack houses to organized drug rings. And every day, the meeting was told, police see the same faces, suffering the same fate: addicts using publicly available equipment to fall further into despair. It is easy to understand the police frustration. It is, isn't it, the old question: is drug addiction a law enforcement problem or a matter of health-care treatment? The city, in fact, has a "four-pillar" strategy: prevention, treatment, harm reduction and enforcement. We are, evidently, better at some parts than others. While needles are available by the thousands -- 300,000 a year -- treatment, especially residential treatment, is severely rationed. Waiting lists for treatment can be in the hundreds. There is no in-house treatment centre in Ottawa for young people under 17, which seems criminal. The public debate has taken on a strange texture, too. The mayor lauds part of the strategy while trashing another. It is apparent, as well, that no figure has been more influential in the discussion during the last year than Police Chief Vern White, who is seen as a godsend to neighbourhoods on the front lines. He is a smart man, with a keen political radar. The chief, not even a year on the job, has dedicated officers where they have the most impact. More beat cops downtown, a street crime unit, periodic street sweeps, open lines to community groups, quasi-social work with addicts. He has set himself up, oddly enough, as perhaps the strongest advocate for a youth residential treatment program, though you wonder why it falls to him. While the chief obviously has strong opinions on harm-reduction policies, he is careful to say that enforcement is only part of the solution. "We come from different places," he told the meeting. Indeed. He comes from the place with a Criminal Code and handcuffs. Where, one wonders, is the city's champion on the treatment side? Who advocates for the addict? The treatment centre -- 48 beds is the figure most often cited -- is also held out as the ultimate solution. Why? How does 48 beds for teenagers put a serious dent in an addiction population that exceeds 3,000? There is one other reality that no one at Monday's meeting mentioned: it is a fallacy that all the city's addicts are ready and willing to leap into treatment. They don't think rationally -- they're drug addicts. We're supposed to do the smart thinking, not let the cops carry the can, or the mayor muddy the waters. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom