Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jul 2008
Source: Harbour City Star (CN BC)
Copyright: 2008 Canwest Publishing Inc.
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/harbourcitystar/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4046
Author: Danielle Bell

DRUG VICTIMS ARE ALL TOO COMMON

The body of a 26-year-old woman with "obvious signs of drug use" was 
found near a south-end Nanaimo phone booth on Monday.

Police do not suspect foul play in the woman's death, which was 
reported by a passerby around 7:45 a.m., in the 700-block of Haliburton Street.

Nanaimo RCMP spokesman Const. Gary O'Brien said on Monday the 
territory is "a very active area" known for its drug use and nuisance 
properties. "Unfortunately, it's not an uncommon occurrence," said 
O'Brien of drug overdoses. "That's the sad reality."

Police in Nanaimo are called to drug overdoses several times a week, 
said O'Brien. And drug addicts are discovered dead in alleyways, on 
the streets and in rooming houses in Nanaimo once or twice a month.

Though police have yet to identify the woman, word of her death was 
already circulating the streets on Monday morning.

For long-time Haliburton Street residents Doug and Tanya Hiltz, it's 
the latest development in a neighbourhood they have been working to 
rebuild for years.

"I knew it was coming," said Tanya Hiltz. "There's a lot of bad 
(things) going on."

While they are not surprised a woman died of a suspected overdose on 
their street, "it's unusual for (drug addicts) to be so far up (on 
Haliburton)," said Doug Hiltz. He patrols the street regularly, 
shooing addicts away, reporting incidents to police and picking up 
discarded needles. He's already collected about 200 needles in a week.

Yet with the majority of known crackhouses concentrated in the 
100-block of Haliburton, a death in the 700-block "is unusual," said Doug.

For each drug house shut down, another three open, he said.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart