Pubdate: Tue, 27 May 2008 Source: Record, The (Kitchener, CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Record Contact: http://www.therecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/225 Author: Frances Barrick Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) ONE-OF-A-KIND FACILITY FOR TEEN ADDICTS OPENS Teenage boys addicted to alcohol and drugs have a ray of hope now in a red-brick home in Kitchener. Yesterday, about 30 people gathered for the official opening of Ray of Hope's Youth180, a six-bed residential treatment centre on Schneider Avenue. The centre provides a live-in, four-month program for teenage boys from 13 to 17 years old. Organizers say this residential program is the first of its kind in southern Ontario. It includes free addiction counselling and schooling. Before, local teenagers had to travel to Ottawa or Thunder Bay for help. The Kitchener program also provides four months of follow-up care involving the teens and their families, which is a first for Ontario, the organizers say. The province has pledged $1.6 million to cover operating costs for two years. It cost about $50,000 to renovate the home, already owned by Ray of Hope. Four teens have already moved into the building. Teenagers can be chosen for the program based on referrals from local hospitals, doctors and other agencies. Frances Moriarty of New Hamburg only wishes the program had been around when her then 15-year-old son, Jody, needed help in 1999 for drug addictions. "It is long overdue," said Moriarty, who knows from experience about the lack of care for troubled teens and the lack of support for families. Her son was one of dozens of teens at Waterloo-Oxford District Secondary School in Baden who used cocaine and heroin. Moriarty co-founded a self-help and support group for parents called CLEAN, or Community Link Empowered Against Narcotics. She also helped Ray of Hope, a non-profit, Christian-based organization, develop its newest treatment program. Moriarty said that when her son attended programs, first in Thunder Bay and later in Elora, the only role of parents was to drop their teens off. But the Kitchener program involves families from the start, and parents play an active role in the four-month follow-up care. She said her son would have fared better had the family been involved in his care. Today, Jody is 24, off drugs and working and doing well. His drug habit started in Grade 5 with marijuana. Harry Whyte, the chief executive officer of Ray of Hope, said the new facility is just a first step toward the organization's ultimate goal - -- a larger youth addiction centre, for both sexes, on donated land on Charles Street, near Stirling Avenue, in Kitchener. But construction plans stalled when the province balked at the $4.5 million cost to operate a 40-bed centre. The province has asked the group to scale back its plans. Whyte said Ray of Hope is now considering for the Charles Street site a 20-bed facility for teenage addicts, as well as a supportive housing project and office space for social service agencies. A 20-bed facility would cost about $2.5 million a year to run. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin