Pubdate: Fri, 5 Jun 2009 Source: Coast Reporter (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Coast Reporter Contact: http://www.coastreporter.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/580 Author: Brent Richter TRANSITION HOUSE SURPRISES, ANGERS RESIDENTS Sechelt - Some residents in Elphinstone and Gibsons are fearful after learning a transition house for recovering drug and alcohol addicts has opened on Pratt Road. The VisionQuest house currently has only one resident, but neighbouring residents worry the house will bring potential criminal threats, especially from off-Coast, to their neighbourhood. Jim O'Rourke, executive director for the VisionQuest Society, said he plans for staff and residents to do some basic farming at the house, and no dangerous criminals will be housed there. Bill Youdell lives next to the transition house and said he has worries about the types of people who will be staying at VisionQuest. He wishes there had been more consultation and warning to the public. "Nobody came around. Nobody told us anything - lack of respect. That's how I feel," he said. Youdell said the facility is in the wrong location as it is too close to schools and there are too many young people who live and walk in the area. "People actually say we're fear mongers. For those people, I'd like them to step up, throw their address in the pot and maybe there's a rental next to them. I have to raise three kids here," he said. "I can't stay here and raise my three kids next door. I don't know who these people are and I'm not allowed to find out and I don't want to be one of those statistics that turn around and say 'Jeez, that person slipped out. It was an accident. There is an investigation. We're sorry.' I just can't have that." Sunshine Coast Regional District (SCRD) zoning for the house currently allows for transition housing, but Youdell said he believes work being done on the house to prepare it for farming is not up to code. He added that the land behind the house is largely swamp and not suited for farming. Youdell said he and other neighbours plan to use whatever legal means they can find to fight VisionQuest's operation. "We're going to keep on them. We're going to keep on the SCRD. We're going to keep on Lorne Lewis [SCRD director for Elphinstone]," Youdell said. But O'Rourke said the rumours about pedophiles and violent criminals being shipped in from the Lower Mainland to live in the house are totally unfounded and are doing damage to his efforts to help reintegrate recovering users back into society. According to O'Rourke, the only people staying at the house will be Sunshine Coast residents who have already had drug and alcohol treatment off-Coast. "The misinformation that's being spread is not only unhelpful, it's destructive. And under the Criminal Code of Canada, it dictates harassment and the spreading of hate literature," he said. "These guys have the right to get better because if they don't get better, they're going to continue doing more damage . They'll be reintegrating themselves back into society so they'll be going back to work. They'll be going to family dinners. The idea is to offer a safe environment where they can be at and not have to worry about using drugs or being caught at a house party where everyone is drinking." O'Rourke said he is used to public opposition when opening a new VisionQuest house, but that opposition fades with time as neighbours come to know what goes on at the house and see that it is no threat. O'Rourke said the rumours of sexual offenders being housed there put his staff and the single resident at risk. O'Rourke said he has already had four death threats from the Sunshine Coast since the rumours began to spread. But, O'Rourke said, he will not be intimidated and is committed to seeing the house remain open to help Coast residents restart their lives without drugs and alcohol. "We don't take sexual offenders. There are no plans for long-term recovery there," he said. "There will only be transitional housing as per the zoning. And that's just to reintegrate Coast people back into the Coast." The SCRD is still actively looking into the house. At last Thursday's board meeting, the board directed staff to further investigate the work going on at the house and its zoning compliance with the Agricultural Land Commission. They also motioned to ask a VisionQuest representative to hold a public meeting in Elphinstone. "We're still working through that process and getting legal opinions and getting the information [the board] requested," said John France, chief administrative officer for the SCRD. France said staff are making progress, but their report will not be ready until it is presented to the planning and development committee meeting at the SCRD Thursday. Sunshine Coast RCMP Sgt. Stuart Falebrinza said he, too, was surprised to hear that the house was up and running. He first learned of it when a VisionQuest employee dropped by the detachment in May. Though the RCMP approves of operations like VisionQuest, Falebrinza said he would have appreciated more advanced warning and open communication. "We do support rehabilitation facilities for addictions, but with that being said, we are a member of the community, and planning consultation usually makes things go a bit smoother," he said. Retired Staff Sgt. Ed Hill is scheduled to make a presentation on behalf of VisionQuest at the Elphin-stone Electors Association meeting on Wednesday at Frank West Hall at 7 p.m. Hill was one of the founders of VisionQuest and remains active with the organization. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake