Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jan 2009 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Allen Garr CITY BADLY NEEDS MENTAL HEALTH ADVOCATE There is an argument to be made for the city refusing to hire a mental health advocate. The NPA made it when it held the majority on council last time around and Vision Vancouver councillors failed to get a motion passed asking for the position to be created. Lone NPA Coun. Suzanne Anton made it again this week when the Vision majority led by Coun. Kerry Jang passed a motion to further pursue the idea, which was a Vision campaign promise. Anton argues that mental health is a provincial responsibility. The city is entering a new field and will be picking up costs that should legitimately be borne by a senior level of government. But there is a better argument to support hiring the advocate. Vancouver has a history of stepping in temporarily or permanently to deal with problems that are technically the responsibility of senior governments. Vancouver funded the first needle exchange under then mayor Gordon Campbell until the provincial health authority picked up the bill. While drugs and addiction are federal and provincial responsibilities and Vancouver's drug policy relies largely on senior levels of government to fund it, Vancouver pays for drug policy coordinator Donald MacPherson and a small support staff. Social housing is clearly something the province and Ottawa should be responsible for, but Vancouver has staff and housing outreach worker Judy Graves assigned to help the homeless and contributes money and resources for homeless shelters. We do this because the people being assisted are living in our city and on our streets. But it's more than a matter of having a good heart that prompts these actions. There are economic benefits to harm reduction and providing the homeless with shelter and a safe environment. You could also argue that setting up a mental health advocate with small staff support would lead to better use of city resources and actually save money. No one is more aware of that than the Vancouver Police Department. As things stand now, the police are overwhelmed by the problem. A recent VPD study concluded that a third of the calls police responded to across the city involved at least one person who was mentally ill. In the Downtown Eastside, that number is up to 50 per cent. While cops may truly care to help those who are mentally ill, they would be the first to admit that they are not the best trained to do the job; they are too expensive to be doing that work and their services could be better used elsewhere. The Car 87 program, which has a cop travel along with a psychiatric nurse, may have been fine a few decades ago. It barely addresses the problem now. Jang is a practicing psychiatrist who specializes in mental illness and drug addiction at UBC. He says there are many organizations, from hospitals to neighbourhood houses, that want to help the mentally ill in this city. But there is no overall plan to direct their efforts. That would be a task for the mental health advocate. The advocate would locate resources and coordinate efforts. There is a bit of a tussle within city hall as to just how this advocate will work with the folks focusing on homelessness and drug addiction. Many mentally ill people are both homeless and addicts. There has been a serious lobbying effort to hand this new task to the drug policy coordinator. Jang says that is not going to happen, although all three areas will work together. Jang also says one important role for the advocate would be to report publicly on the progress that is being made. And VPD's Car 87 supervisor Sgt. Bill Pake agrees. He says any time light can be shone on this problem "we are happy to see that." Staff is already working on a mental health plan for the city. We should get a report back on this within the month. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin