Pubdate: Fri, 30 May 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Jeff Gray Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) CITY TO STUDY SAFE DRUG-USE SITES Councillor Criticizes Conservative Government's Drug Strategy For 'Taking Giant Steps Back' In Reducing Addiction Toronto public-health officials say they are going ahead with a long-promised study of the feasibility of safe drug-use sites in the city, even as the federal government says it will appeal a B.C. court ruling that allows Vancouver's controversial safe-injection site to stay open. While city council passed a wide-reaching drug strategy in 2005 calling for a study of the concept, Toronto Public Health only recently received provincial funding to strike a committee to start looking into the idea and consulting experts, police, community members and drug users. The committee's report on the idea, and any recommendations, remain six to 12 months away, said Shaun Hopkins, manager of the Toronto Public Health's current needle-exchange program, which also distributes "safer" crack kits. "We'll be talking to community members, drug users and anybody who would be affected by it," Ms. Hopkins said, adding that the city's current needle exchange, aimed at curtailing the spread of HIV among drug users, distributes 700,000 free needles a year. City Councillor Gord Perks - who co-chairs the city's drug strategy implementation task force - said the city should "start a conversation" with Torontonians on the idea, which proponents say allows addicts to use drugs in a safe environment, instead of on the street, reducing the risks of transmitting diseases and overdoses. "We already have a lot of safe consumption sites in the city of Toronto: They're called bars," Mr. Perks said. "Alcohol is an addictive substance that can cause all kinds of behavioural problems and actually causes more harm, in terms of harm to the community, danger, violent behaviour and so on, than any substance." He criticized the Conservative government's approach to drugs and its recent drug strategy. "The federal government ... has been taking giant steps back from where the rest of the world is, in terms of figuring out how to reduce the harms caused by drug use." Toronto's drug strategy places restrictions on any future safe drug consumption site, including that any study of the idea must include input from businesses and local residents, and that the federal and provincial governments and police must all agree to it. City Councillor Kyle Rae, the driving force behind the city's drug strategy when it passed three years ago, said Toronto's drug problems are different than Vancouver's, where the Insite safe-injection site serves heroin addicts. In Toronto, crack cocaine is much more prevalent than heroin among street drug users. Drug abuse is spread across the city in several neighbourhoods, with nowhere near the concentration in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Mr. Rae said a safe-inhalation site for crack users - such as one that operates in Frankfurt - is worth exploring. Ms. Hopkins also said one possibility for Toronto would be small safe-use centres in various sites across the city. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin