Pubdate: Sat, 07 Mar 2009 Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Surrey Leader Contact: http://www.surreyleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236 Author: Kevin Diakiw FED UP OVER UNCONTROLLED RECOVERY HOMES An estimated 40 alcohol and drug recovery homes in this city remain completely unregulated, despite a decade-long call for controls to protect clients. Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts has made regulating the industry one of her missions since finding a woman's recovery home in Panorama Ridge in the late 1990s where children were packed four and five to a room. At the time there were an estimated 50 recovery homes in Surrey and reports of client abuse were rampant. They continue today, and Watts is fed up over a lack of action on the part of the province. Bruce Ralston, the NDP MLA for Surrey-Whalley, said his riding is feeling the impact of recovery home operators taking advantage of clients. "Certainly in my part of Surrey, it's a problem. There are some good ones that take care of themselves, but when you have a bad one, the problem spills out into the neighbourhood," Ralston said. "I think some kind of regulation is required." He prefers the recommendation put forward by Surrey's Crime Reduction Strategy, where a board with professionals from housing and health would oversee the homes. Last Tuesday, unlicensed recovery homes came up in the B.C. legislature, when NDP Leader Carol James hammered the Liberals over their deregulation of recovery homes in 2002. "Why are communities still waiting for the B.C. Liberals to fix a problem that they created when they deregulated these homes?" James asked Health Minister George Abbott, who shot back that it was the NDP who created onerous rules that nearly shut down important services such as Vancouver's Union Gospel Mission. Watts is tired of the finger pointing and wants something done about it. Each party shares the blame for the current situation, she says. "We asked the provincial government back in the day to have a special provision for drug and alcohol recovery homes," Watts said. "And their response to that was it's a housing issue. It's not a housing issue, it's a health issue." An attempt to make them comply with the Community Care Facilities Act in the late '90s was onerous and costly, causing many good homes to shut down. The Liberals deregulated them in 2002, and that's the way they remain. "Again it's something beyond our jurisdiction we've been trying to get movement on, in almost 10 years - and nothing," Watts said. She points out there are several good recovery homes in this city, but a system without any controls is subject to abuse. "It's when there are individuals taking advantage of vulnerable people, and the government is paying them through their $500-a-month (social assistance cheque)," Watts said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart