Pubdate: Tue, 16 Sep 2008 Source: Victoria News (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Victoria News Contact: http://www.vicnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267 Author: Rebecca Aldous Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) ADVOCATES POINT TO NEED FOR FIXED NEEDLE EXCHANGE Things in Victoria have gotten really bad, says a street nurse. Carolyn Showler, who works out of the Victoria Cool Aid Society's Swift Street clinic, has seen homeless and drug addicts - who once had a place to congregate, get help and receive basic daily needs - disappear. Since AIDS Vancouver Island was forced to shut the doors to its Cormorant Street facility in May - it was Victoria's sole fixed-site needle exchange - those needing help have spread around town. This makes it difficult for people like Showler, who promote harm reduction, to maintain contacts and ensure people are getting care. "I think the worst of it would be to come," she warned. "Because there (aren't so many resources) and there are a lot of things that happen when people do not have that space to go to." This Thursday (Sept. 18), FIX Victoria is holding a community dialogue focusing on the city's health crisis resulting from the loss of harm reduction services. It's a topic which has no easy solution, but one which can't be ignored any longer, Showler said. Victoria's injection drug users are currently being serviced by a one-year pilot project mobile needle exchange run by AVI and funded by the Vancouver Island Health Authority. But it is simply not good enough, Showler said. "Harm reduction is about a relationship and understanding and respecting people. You know it's not that you can't do that when you are mobile, but how easy is it to do that when you are just meeting new people on the fly?" The decision to settle for a mobile needle exchange sends the wrong message to the estimated 1,500 people who call the streets of Victoria home, Showler said. For many of them, the fixed needle exchange was a special place where they could clean up, get food and sign up for treatment. "I think that gives a sense of a lack of caring, and that VIHA has said 'this is fine' and it isn't fine," she said. Susan Boyd, associate professor of policy and practices at University of Victoria, can't understand why the city and VIHA aren't moving faster to set up a fixed needle exchange, when both parties acknowledge its benefits. Having no fixed site is rare among cities of Victoria's size and wealth of public knowledge on harm reduction gains, added Boyd, who is among the speakers lined up for the FIX forum. "Given that environment, I am surprised that this would happen," she said. "I believe the health authority and AIDS Vancouver Island and the city should come together and quickly create a stable house for needle exchange in Victoria." Closing the Cormorant Street exchange was not by choice, VIHA spokesperson Shannon Marshall pointed out. Unable to work a solution with neighbours who complained about the detrimental effects of having the facility on their block, and being unable to find an appropriate relocation site, VIHA's hands were tied, she said. "It is certainly not a lack of commitment on the health authority's part," she said. The first three-month evaluation of the mobile needle exchange will be released within the next two weeks. At the moment, VIHA has no plans to find a site for a fixed needle exchange. The community forum starts at 7 p.m. at the First Metropolitan United Church at 932 Balmoral Rd. For more information, please visit www.harmreductionvictoria.ca or call 250-884-9821 or 250-477-8546. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath