Pubdate: Tue, 22 Apr 2008 Source: Mayerthorpe Freelancer (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 The Freelancer Contact: http://www.mayerthorpefreelancer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/733 Author: Melissa Hamelin IS THE OIL BOOM AFFECTING LOCAL DRUG USE? Is there a link between Alberta's booming industry and its booming drug scene? Alberta has been home to a booming economy with booming paychecks, but it has also been called the drug capital of Canada. Is there a connection? The troubling link between boomtowns and high rates of substance abuse is usually attributed to workers having too much money and too little to do. But a recent study of one Alberta community suggests underlying pressures including loneliness, a lack of healthy social connections and a need to "keep up with the Joneses" are to blame. Two University of Alberta researchers worked with the Canadian Forest Service to conduct the study, which found that substance abuse in the neighbouring municipality of Hinton runs far deeper than the current economic boom. The group also found that because many resource-based communities in Alberta and North America have similar social and economic structures, the study's findings might provide insights into the social challenges of boomtowns everywhere. "What research in the town of Hinton has revealed is that the roots of substance abuse are deeply entrenched in the economic and social structure of the community," said Angela C. Angell, co-author of the study and a master's student in the University of Alberta's Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences. The study reads that although the costs of substance abuse are difficult to calculate for individual communities, according to the Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission (AADAC), it is estimated that drug and alcohol abuse will cost the province of Alberta over $400 million every year in lost productivity. The breakdown of these costs includes risk of injury, depression, stress, reduced morale, absenteeism, and higher worker's compensation and insurance costs. In 2006 the researchers interviewed 108 people living and working in Hinton, a community of 10,000 , which was experiencing an oil and gas boom at the time. The town is also supported by pulp and paper mills and mining. The interviews, which included forest, mining and oil and gas workers, medical personnel, RCMP officers, seniors, students and people recovering from addictions, identified five common factors that contribute to social breakdown: 1) people of high and low incomes are separated by socially tight-knit groups; 2) high incomes lead to a "keeping up with the Joneses" mentality, which produces subsequent financial stress and less time for family; 3) transient workers are prone to alcohol and drug use due to loneliness; 4) shift work leaves workers exhausted and disrupts family routines and relationships; 5) a union environment, coupled with high incomes, leads to a "culture of entitlement" among some workers who feel that there are no consequences to their actions, including the misuse of alcohol and drugs. The interview data also indicated that the problems in Hinton might be province-wide. One interviewee commented, "Is there a town in Alberta that's not full of drugs nowadays?" Study participants did acknowledge the negative side effects to Alberta's economic boom. As one participant commented: "Sure it's fine with the oilfield and all the jobs, but at what cost though? The next generation is going to be paying big time for this. Everyone forgets, you know, when they go on a ride, when we have a good time, everyone forgets that this fun ride comes to a full stop sooner or later." "It is simplistic to point to fat paycheques as the sole cause of substance abuse and it's unfair to only give attention to these issues during boom times," Angell said. "The social problems in resource-based communities have existed for many years and are exacerbated by boom town conditions, she noted. "Communities such as Hinton have been battling these issues long before the oil and gas boom, and the inter-generational transfer of these behaviours and attitudes have led to widespread family and community dysfunction." Participants commented that they felt children growing up in homes with substance abuse are particularly vulnerable to the impact of substance abuse. An addiction councilor described one long-term affect that they had noted, "children often feel that they are not valuable, that they are not good enough [and that] they are not worth a whole lot." "Governments also need to earmark funds and programs to meet the unique social and economic challenges of resource-based communities," said John Parkins, a professor of rural economy at the University of Alberta and co-author of the study. "This funding should include regional, rural-based drug treatment centres," he added. The study recommends that industry and major employers need to promote healthy lifestyles and, though desperate for workers, not turn a blind eye to substance abuse issues among their current or would-be employees. Results of the study were presented in 2007 at the 13th International Symposium of Society and Resource Management in Park City, Utah and at the Canadian Rural Revitalization Conference in Vermilion, Alberta. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom