Pubdate: Thu, 11 Sep 2008 Source: Williams Lake Tribune, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Williams Lake Tribune Contact: http://www.wltribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1226 IF YOU BUILD IT, WILL THEY COME? A detox centre in Williams Lake could be a big benefit to the community, but it's not a magic pill. It won't solve the problem of addicted people on our streets on its own, and it won't necessarily solve the problem of RCMP members having to spend valuable time dealing with public intoxication. And sending the Interior Health Authority a bill isn't going to make it do anything at all. Mayor Scott Nelson says the billing plan is to raise awareness of the problem, and Nelson is a master at staging bold political moves to generate headlines and coverage. He is, after all, the mayor who told the provincial government the City wouldn't pay the carbon tax (a position he later changed); told the Kamloops Daily News last year that "we are going to fire Interior Health" and run Deni House (that never happened); and will present local judges with a community impact statement, as if they don't read the newspaper or live in this community and are oblivious to the huge amount of crime in Williams Lake. So we won't be surprised when Interior Health doesn't pay up. We also wouldn't be surprised if future requests from Williams Lake aren't looked at with a great deal of skepticism, based on our recent history. Nelson and city council do deserve credit and praise for recognizing a serious problem (and an incredibly poor use of police officers' time) in the city, and at least doing something to address it. Nelson says, "What we know is that it's costing our community $150,000 to provide a service that we feel Interior Health should be providing." That is not the case. Interior Health would never be the agency to arrest people for public intoxication or to shelter them. A detox centre is only useful if people use it. There's nothing to say it wouldn't be used, not only by Williams Lake residents, but addicts from surrounding areas as well, and the only way to know for sure is to build one. But the fact that the hospital's Gateway Crisis Stabilization Unit often has vacant beds is a sign there's help out there not now being used. Addicts can't be forced into detox; they can't be dragged into treatment or locked up and forbidden the substance they abuse. Vancouver introduced Insite for its addicts - it's not detox, it's a safe place to get high. Addicts have to want to get clean. If that's the case, then a detox centre here in Williams Lake - where those who want it can get help in their own community can do so - would be a great benefit. An Insite in Williams Lake isn't the answer either, but perhaps an in-between measure that Interior Health could help with is to bring more outreach nurses like Patti Murphy, profiled in Tuesday's paper, to Williams Lake. Those nurses could make addicts aware of the stabilization unit, offer support, and direct them to services they need. Currently, Murphy spends two days a week in Williams Lake. What could come of having a nurse available every day? And surely that would be a cheaper option for Interior Health for now than partnering with the City for a detox centre? There are no easy answers when it comes to addiction issues, and the effects of those issues on communities. Cities all over Canada are plagued with the same problem, and none seem to have come up with a magic solution. A detox centre may very well be a help to Williams Lake, but finger-pointing and threats aren't going to do the trick. There's no guarantee that a detox centre will solve Williams Lake's problem. Interior Health is right that it's not responsible for sheltering addicts on the streets. Its responsibility is to help those who want help. Unless every single drug and alcohol abuser in Williams Lake decides to enter treatment, the sad reality is the police, the City, and the residents will have to continue to endure the status quo, which is, as council points out, unacceptable. The City should look at more short- and medium-term solutions, like a shelter, to help addicts and gauge the demand (among the addicts, not other residents) for a detox centre. That would be a more productive and less provocative way to address the issue. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake