Pubdate: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Andrew Hanon, Staff Writer YOKELS BREEDING INTOLERANCE There's a fine line between grassroots protest and a lynch mob. Two cases in point: the methadone clinic that was literally run out of Calgary this month (lynch mob) and the outrage over a group home in Strathcona County last month (grassroots protest). After being forced to move three times in six years, the operators of the Second Chance Recovery clinic in Calgary announced they're throwing in the towel, citing threats against its staff by its new neighbours. The clinic had just moved into the Braeside area in the city's southwest, to the horror of some residents, who were convinced the 500 recovering addicts who used the clinic would bring with them crime, moral decay, disease, decreased property values and general mayhem. At a packed town hall meeting last week, neighbours threatened to vandalize the clinic and staff vehicles. Lawyers for the clinic claim its received a similar reception everywhere it's moved, so they're throwing in the towel. The truth is, the narrow-minded yokels who drove the clinic out of business are the ones contributing to crime, not the addicts. Addicts go into a methadone program because they're trying to straighten out their lives. They're certainly not all homeless junkies. Many of them are prescription drug abusers who got hooked on painkillers like codeine and oxycodone. They take daily doses of methadone, which at certain dosage levels dulls the craving for other drugs while not giving the high. Users can start putting the pieces of their lives back together while tapering off drugs altogether. Now that the Second Chance clinic's being closed, many of its patients won't have any access to methadone, putting them at risk of becoming exactly what the good people of Braeside fear most -- homeless, potentially violent, petty thieves. Contrast that with the people living around Bosco Homes Uncas Campus near Ardrossan, who have a legitimate reason to be outraged. On June 1, the bodies of Barry Boenke, 68, and Susan Trudel, 50, were found at a rural home not far from the group home for deeply troubled teens. Two teens living in the group home were charged in the slaying, one with murder and another as an accessory after the fact. It was the final straw for Boenke and Trudel's neighbours, who have complained for years that kids were constantly running away from the Bosco home, trespassing, vandalizing and stealing from the surrounding properties. But did the residents mount a campaign to shut down the home? No. Instead, they demanded that the Children's Services ministry, Bosco and the RCMP work together to eliminate the hundreds of runaway incidents that happen every year. And when kids went AWOL, they wanted to be notified. Despite the tragedy, most of the neighbours understood the necessity of facilities like this, considered the last stop for kids in the child welfare system. "Facilities like this are absolutely needed," one said, just days after the killing. "But we need to ensure that proper processes and protocols are in place to keep everyone safe." Some even insisted that any additional safety and security measures take into account the teens' dignity. Two communities, two very different attitudes. The question is, which would you rather call home? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr