Pubdate: Sat, 03 May 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Frances Bula INSITE BACKERS STEP UP FIGHT TO SAVE IT Advocates Of Safe Injection Site Launch Campaign Pressing Ottawa To Let It Stay Open VANCOUVER - The last-ditch political battle to keep open Canada's only supervised injection site is about to begin. Friday, the International Journal of Drug Policy published articles by scientists from around the world condemning the federal government for interfering politically with the site's research. On Monday, well-known West Coast criminologist Neil Boyd will hold a media conference in Ottawa to tell national reporters about his research into the benefits of the Vancouver site, which will see its federal narcotics law exemption expire on June 30. Injection-site advocates will hold a rally Tuesday in a Downtown Eastside park featuring 1,000 white crosses to represent the people whose overdoses never ran the risk of becoming fatal because they were injecting at Insite instead of on the street. On Wednesday, Vancouver street nurses will stage an "information picket" at the office of the Vancouver Police Union, whose president has become a vocal critic of the site. And on Friday, B.C. Nurses Union president Debra MacPherson will hold a media conference in front of the site to talk about its health benefits. Along the way, people from all three of Vancouver's civic parties will gather to make a statement of support. A B.C. Supreme Court case over the injection site, instigated by the site's operators, the Portland Hotel Society, will continue to play out. And there's likely to be more. "I'm feeling this is the do-or-die time," says Nathan Allen, the face of the campaign called Insite for Community Safety. "We're definitely going to ramp up the pressure this month." Allen and the Portland Hotel Society, along with B.C. scientists, politicians and health-care groups, are working on events, statements, reports and whatever else it takes to convince the federal government it will be a political disaster to shut down a site so supported by the local establishment. "As we get closer to the deadline, there will be heightened level of activity," said David Hurford, a spokesman in Mayor Sam Sullivan's office. The site opened in 2003 with a three-year exemption from federal narcotics laws. It has since been extended twice, for 18 months each, by a Conservative government that has clearly indicated its ideological discomfort with the site, which critics see as enabling drug use. The sense now is that the federal government has to choose to either shut it down, give it a long-term exemption, or find some way of getting itself out of a mess by turning it over to the provincial government's jurisdiction. That last option would allow the Vancouver site to remain without opening the door to injection sites in other provinces. Hurford said the mayor's office is trying to make sure that the political activism is smart and strategic. "We need to be cautious about the rhetoric and recognize that the federal government is doing some good things with the national drug strategy, with treatment money," said Hurford. "And then they need to see that with this issue, there may be a danger if this decision goes the wrong way that we may lose some of that momentum." But that coordinated campaign doesn't sit well with opponents. Vancouver Police Union president Tom Stamatakis, who has emerged as the site's most high-profile local opponent, said the public is being misled by the "well-funded and well-organized" lobby from the pro-site advocates. "It seems like the proponents have the momentum and they're ruthless in getting their message out." That's not something the advocates are so sure of. The Portland Hotel Society's Mark Townsend said his group is engaging in the strategic events it is because they're the only mechanisms it has to get its message across. "The prime minister and the police are gigantic organizations. All we are is a tiny non-profit. We've tried to get meetings in Ottawa but we hear nothing. This is the only way we have to communicate with Stephen Harper and his people so they get what people really think." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek