Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jun 2009 Source: Cowichan News Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Cowichan News Leader Contact: http://www.cowichannewsleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1314 Author: Patrick Hrushowy Note: Our View from the right columnist, Patrick Hrushowy began his working career as reporter with The Province in Vancouver. After several years on the labour and political beats, Hrushowy branched out as a consultant helping business and private interests work with government. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Downtown+Eastside Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) MOST ON THE STREET ARE PROBABLY GOING TO STAY THERE We live in a strange world. Illicit drugs are by definition illegal but we commit enormous public resources to make it easier and safer to use those drugs, all the while cracking down on the gangs that are making a killing (no pun intended) distributing those very same drugs. The courts have said it is a constitutional right to sleep in parks (at least in Victoria), never mind that it goes against land use bylaws. You try having a number of people tenting in your backyard for a period of time and watch how fast the bylaw enforcement officer shows up. Most of these weird happenings are centred on people with drug addictions, along with mental illness and/or personality disorders and arguably are not really competent to make basic life decisions. These are the hardcore homeless and left to their own devices they tend to exist in a basic animal-like survival mode in any hidey-hole or makeshift shelter they can piece together. We have largely been spared the disaster that is the Downtown Eastside in Vancouver where thousands of addicted and broken people congregate in an area much smaller than the City of Duncan. Hundreds of millions are spent each year trying to keep these people alive and in some semblance of humanity. In Victoria the debate is about a fixed location for a needle exchange but no one wants to be a neighbour to where these folks congregate. It is not possible to overstate the destructive impact on a neighbourhood caused by a crowd that has lost nearly all social inhibitions and cannot or will not perform basic body functions in an appropriate manner. Yet, there are those who insist it is only right the imposition takes place. Many efforts are being made to house the homeless and there is a hope that once settled in a stable environment these people can be channelled into appropriate treatment. But, I'm not sure if it will lead to many individuals transitioning into private life outside of a supervised shelter. There is this fiction that homeless people are just ordinary folk on a bit of a run of bad luck. With a helping hand, it is said, they will be on their way, living like the rest of us and paying for their own keep with a real job. I doubt that is true for the vast majority of hardcore homeless. If we want these people off the street and away from trouble, we had better be prepared to commit long-term resources. I suspect we need to accept that they are likely to require supervised care for the rest of their natural lives. Response From the Left Blame the victims, make it their own fault that they are handicapped, addicted, mentally ill, temporarily or permanently in poverty, then you can feel good about not asking wealthy individuals and profitable corporations to pay taxes to help the disappearing middle class pay for a solid social safety net that is everyone's right. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake