Pubdate: Thu, 27 Aug 2009 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Matthew Pearson, Staff Writer DRUG USERS BACK PROPOSED NEEDLE EXCHANGE A group representing intravenous drug users in Victoria is throwing its support behind the proposed site for a permanent new needle exchange, weeks after suggesting the Princess Avenue location was inappropriate. Bruce Wallace, an advisory board member of SOLID -- Society of Living Intravenous Drug Users --said yesterday that backing the Princess Avenue location is the only way to ensure Victoria will have a fixed-site needle exchange running by winter. "To get a site up as soon as possible, this is what we're going to have to do," he said. The group met with officials from the Vancouver Island Health Authority to underscore the importance of involving drug users in planning the new site, he said. "We're very much committed to working with VIHA on that site and to make sure peers are involved in the establishment and some of the service delivery." VIHA spokeswoman Shannon Marshall confirmed many of SOLID's concerns were addressed in a face-to-face meeting with health authority officials in early August and welcomed the group's support. But she added the undisclosed location on Princess Avenue still needs to meet criteria set by the city's Needle Exchange Advisory Committee. "There's still a lot of work to be done before that proposal is finalized, but we are hoping this is a viable location and that we will be able to site a fixed-site needle exchange before the winter," she said. Late last month, SOLID sent a letter to VIHA rejecting the proposed site on Princess Avenue between Douglas and Blanshard streets -- just south of the Bay Street Armoury -- on the grounds it's located too far from the downtown core in an area known to drug users as "extremely dangerous and violent." SOLID members would still prefer a downtown location, but Wallace said yesterday the proposed site is better than none at all. "We're realizing that there's one site proposed and after more than a year, we need to get behind the one that's chosen," he said. A needle exchange on Cormorant Street closed in May 2008. The site ran for about six years before being evicted by the landlord after complaints from neighbours about people loitering and leaving behind needles, condoms and human excrement. The advisory committee, made up of representatives of the city, police, downtown residents, businesses and VIHA, among others, has been working to find a new site. SOLID formally withdrew from the committee in June, however, saying in a letter that the views of drug users were not being heard. "We feel silenced by the inequities in a group that over-represents the views of people whose lives are not at stake and where we are not able to represent our views," the letter said. "If the committee had represented our interests fairly, we would have already have moved ahead with a well-situated, fixed-site needle exchange." Wallace said re-establishing a fixed needle-exchange service in the city is the first step toward a comprehensive harm-reduction strategy that could eventually include multiple venues for needle distribution. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr