Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jul 2008 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Allen Garr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) OWEN'S FIGHT WORTHY OF ORDER In all the kerfuffle over Dr. Henry Morgentaler being named a member of the Order of Canada, it may have slipped your notice that there were several other people on that list, too, including former Vancouver mayor Philip Owen. You could consider it was just an unlucky time for Owen to be given the honour as it was buried by the storm around Morgentaler. But it was more a case of good luck for Owen to find himself in Morgentaler's company. Morgentaler would have been just another doctor and Owen would have been just another mayor if they each hadn't taken up the social causes that helped to make our country a better place. I wouldn't put Owen on the same level as Morgentaler in terms of the impact of his crusade. But if he didn't get passionate in his final term as mayor and champion the city's drug strategy and the supervised injection site, he would have been little more than a smudge on a page of this country's history. The debate over drug use and addiction may not have the same sizzle as a battle over a woman's right to choose and access to safe and affordable abortions. But what Owen championed took the wind out of those dinosaurs promoting the destructive war on drugs. In his lament about the award going to Morgentaler, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said, "My preference, to be frank, would be to see the Order of Canada be something that really unifies, that brings Canadians together." How dull. Good thing he's not running the selection committee. Consider how much better off we are because of people who choose to challenge conventional wisdom and practice, particularly when that practice damages people's lives. And what better people to honour. In a review of Morgentaler's history in the weekend Globe and Mail, I was interested to read how a presiding judge over one of Morgentaler's many court cases recalled, "I practically told the jury to find him guilty." Well, the jury acquitted him, as juries had twice before. The judge concluded that "sometime laws precede public opinion; sometimes they follow." And again, while it lacks the gravitas of the abortion debate, and no one is likely to toss their Order of Canada pin back on the pile as a result, Owen and Vancouver's drug policy have crystallized a philosophical shift in the country. Most recently that happened with the help of the courts. A few months ago federal Health Minister Tony Clement was scrambling to gather any bit of evidence to prove that, in spite of the mountain of peer reviewed articles to the contrary, the supervised site was a failure. Then he got bushwhacked. Just before the federal permission to allow the site to operate expired, the site's managers, the Portland Hotel Society, hauled the federal government in front of the B.C. Supreme Court. It argued that the federal drug laws interfered with the constitutional rights of people seeking medical help. The judge agreed. He ruled that Insite could continue to operate indefinitely and without federal permission. He also gave Ottawa a year to rewrite the particular section of the drug laws he found to be in contravention of the constitution. Failing that he would rule the whole law invalid. The federal government has appealed the decision to the B.C. Court of Appeal, and you can bet, if they lose there, it will go to the Supreme Court of Canada. None of this would put Harper in a mood to suggest that Owen's little venture into harm reduction was something that "brings Canada together." Nor, I suspect, would Harper get much pleasure from imagining, sometime hence, the scene at Rideau Hall when Owen and Morgentaler come together with a number of others to receive the highest civilian honour this country offers. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin