Pubdate: Wed, 08 Jul 2009 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2009 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Robert Matas LANDMARK NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAM CLOSING DOWN Innovative Program Run By The Downtown Eastside Youth Activities Society Is Ending After 21 Years Amid Allegations Of Mismanagement And Financial Improprieties North America's first needle exchange program, run by the Downtown Eastside Youth Activities Society, is closing down after 21 years amid allegations of mismanagement and financial improprieties. John Turvey, a former drug addict who formed the group in Canada's most desolate neighbourhood, defied authorities in 1988 with the radical idea of dispensing clean needles to intravenous drug users with HIV/AIDS who were dying in rapidly increasing numbers. He confronted strident opposition from police and politicians who believed the unconventional service provided mostly by former addicts would encourage drug use and lead to an increasing number of contaminated needles abandoned in school grounds and neighbourhood parks. The opposition proved groundless. Within years, the radical innovation was broadly embraced across Canada and the United States as an effective measure to combat a deadly threat to public health. Mr. Turvey, who initially paid for the program out of his own pocket, had anticipated 200 addicts would exchange needles. Within six months, more than 2,000 people in Vancouver were using the service. Municipal and then regional health authorities stepped in to pick up the bills. At its peak in the late 1990s, as many as three million needles a year were being distributed in Vancouver. Mr. Turvey died a folk legend in 2006, with an Order of Canada for his work with young people in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. However, his organization began to lose its place in the community a few years earlier, after illness forced Mr. Turvey to step back from the group. Vancouver's needle exchange in recent years has been provided mostly by other community groups. Around 1.9 million needles were dispensed in Vancouver last year; DEYAS gave out about 10 per cent of them. The regional health agency, Vancouver Coastal Health, anticipates the gap created by the closing of DEYAS could be filled by another community agency by mid-July. At the DEYAS office on Tuesday, five remaining staff members were trying to figure out what would happen to them and to the services that they believe will not be replaced. Funding for the group abruptly ended, after a tumultuous period that included a police investigation into a manager's spending, replacement of a top manager following erratic behaviour and resignation of board members. Staff continued the needle exchange program while the organization around them crumbled. DEYAS exchanged needles with addicts on the street and ran a pick-up service collecting needles in the Downtown Eastside and elsewhere in the city. The group also responded to calls to pick up used needles that came from police and fire departments, the park board and schools. Staff members anticipated that the closing of DEYAS would end needle exchanges during hours of high demand, late at night. Also they said services outside the Downtown Eastside would likely be curtailed. The relationships built by former addicts helping addicts were as important as the needles they handed out, they said. Staff member Robyn Beveland said Mr. Turvey was "a beacon of hope" for addicts. "You see that van coming down the street, and for that moment all desperation goes away and you think, here comes my friend," she said. The needle exchanges often came with education, counselling or just friendship. "These are the things that they do not measure," she said, adding that no statistics were available on the lives they may have saved, and certainly not on the emotional and spiritual relief they provided. Toronto-born Manny Cu, co-ordinator of the needle exchange, was passionate about his job and the place of DEYAS in the community. A recovered addict, he said he used the services of DEYAS and then joined as staff in 1995. As an addict, he knew what it was to live on the street, he said. "I know what it is like when an addict loses hope. That means they don't give a damn. you are not even scared of dying, dying is a relief. What you are afraid of is having to live the way you are living, like an animal," he said. Addicts will do whatever they need to do to have their drugs, he added. "If it means that I'm going to use your syringe even though I know you are HIV, I will still use it, because I do not worry about tomorrow . to hell with the consequences, because I am not afraid to die," Mr. Cu said. "We do this job because we were affected by the addiction. We do this because we believe in the program," he said. "John Turvey sold me his vision. This is a life passion for me." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr