Pubdate: Mon, 5 Jan 2009 Source: Merritt Herald (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Merritt Herald Contact: http://www.merrittherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1446 Author: Tom Fletcher TOUGH LOVE FOR HARD CASES Why, a reader of last week's column asks, are there so many more people on the streets who are hard, or even impossible to house in any conventional sense? There used to be places for these men (and they are mostly men). Places like bush camps where illiteracy and anti-social tendencies were commonplace. The proceeds of dirty, low-skill and dangerous jobs were often squandered in a few days or weeks, and then it was back to the bush. Their lives were less visible, and shorter. There are few low-skill jobs left now. They're done by machines or have migrated overseas. The people have migrated from the margins to urban areas. The mentally ill were locked up, for society's good if not their own. Their drugs were prescribed, for control as much as treatment. So how many homeless people are there in B.C. today? According to Jenny Kwan, the NDP's critic for homelessness, addiction and mental health, it's around 10,000 to 15,000. She points to B.C. Liberal cuts to social programs dating back to 2002, including operating funds for peer support groups like the B.C. Schizophrenia Society, now at risk of shutting down. Rich Coleman, minister of housing and social development, says the number is closer to 5,000. The NDP is using a collection of local estimates, but "we do counts," he says, although he admits they aren't precise because some of society's outsiders hide from all institutional intervention. Coleman says he's doing what Kwan is calling for, outreach programs to bring people into housing with support workers to help keep them there. At some of the inner city hotels he bought in Vancouver, police officers are now assigned, trying to break the cycle of drugs and crime. The hardest cases, he says, are 200 to 300 severely mentally ill drug addicts who cycle from jail to hospital to the streets at huge cost to us all. They are the focus of B.C.'s latest project, the long-awaited "community court." That court needs someplace to send people before it can function. Step one is the former Willingdon youth jail in Burnaby, a secure custody treatment centre which early next year should have all 100 beds open. The message from the court will be, "you'll either go to jail or you'll go here, and you'll go here until you're well," Coleman says. Once the addiction settles down, the mental illness still leaves them unable to live independently, so a group home for the rest of their lives is the best outcome. Clearly 100 beds isn't enough. An assessment was done of one of the unused Riverview Hospital buildings, but Coleman said that would have cost too much and taken too long. Negotiations are underway on another property somewhere in the Fraser Valley that can be opened sooner, at less cost. Where in the Fraser Valley? That's confidential for now. "If we get a chance to close on it, you'll know." And speaking of Riverview, what's become of Coleman's controversial plan to develop that provincial property into a mix of supportive and market housing? That's got "a lot of emotional pieces" attached to it, he says. It will require an "extensive public process," and nothing will happen until next fall, when the priorities mentioned above are further along. NDP housing critic Diane Thorne, a former Coquitlam councillor, says the community favours supportive and transitional housing for mental illness and addiction. But too much of the site has already been sold off for development. "My feeling is that nothing will be said until after the election and I find that very scary." Olympic Housing In October, the B.C. government announced a deal with the Vancouver Olympic organizing committee to reconfigure 320 temporary modular housing units from the Olympic village in Whistler. They are to be combined into 156 permanent homes, to be located in Sechelt, Chetwynd, Chilliwack, Enderby, Saanich and Surrey, at an estimated cost of $43.6 million including land contributed by municipalities. At least one reader wasn't impressed. "Doing the math, that's about $279,000 per trailer. This is what the B.C. Liberals call affordable housing to the poor. How about a nice house in Port Hardy with a view of the bay?" Small Towns Affordable At the recent B.C. Liberal convention in Whistler, a discussion of high housing costs prompted one delegate to shout out an invitation for people to check out Merritt for affordable housing. I passed this tip on to an anonymous reader who called to chastise me for my comments about Victoria's celebrity homeless guy David Arthur Johnston, who camps out at parks and city hall with his Starbucks and smokes. Was the suggestion of moving to our country music capital met with interest? Well, no. It went over about as well as my previous idea that perhaps springtime panhandlers could pitch in with the daffodil harvest and, you know, earn some money. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake