Pubdate: Thu, 08 May 2008 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Cheryl Chan, with a file from Damian Inwood MAYORAL CANDIDATES BACK INSITE Vancouver will continue to support the city's controversial safe-injection site, no matter who sits in the mayor's chair after the November elections. Mayoral candidates Gregor Robertson, Raymond Louie, Peter Ladner and Allan De Genova put aside politics and partisanship yesterday and presented a united front urging Prime Minister Stephen Harper to keep Insite's doors open after June. Incumbent Mayor Sam Sullivan, who did not attend yesterday's news conference, is on record supporting Insite. "We cannot do this without federal help," said NPA candidate Ladner. "Listen to the experts, show some compassion . . . and don't get hung up on the ideology." Former mayor Philip Owen, a pioneer of the city's Four Pillars Drug Strategy, said the war on drugs has been a failure and that Canada should take a different route. "Let us work together open-mindedly and leave the hostilities somewhere else and work out a Canadian solution," he urged Harper. Insite, the only supervised safe-injection site in North America, has operated in the Downtown Eastside since 2003 under a federal drug-law exemption. The permit, which has been extended twice, expires June 30. Vision Vancouver candidate De Genova said he's disappointed at the lack of support from the Tory government: "We should be expanding the Insite centre, not fighting to keep the one centre open." Liz Evans, director of the Portland Hotel Society which runs Insite, said about 600 to 1,100 people use the facility daily. "We're absolutely maxed out. The need for a second site is pretty essential right now," she said. The society has filed suit in B.C. Supreme Court, arguing Insite provides a health service and should be under the jurisdiction of the provincial government. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek