Pubdate: Fri, 02 Oct 2009 Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Surrey Leader Contact: http://www.surreyleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236 Author: Kevin Diakiw HOME NOT WELCOME: RESIDENTS Newton residents are readying for battle as a huge recovery home project heads to public hearing on Monday. Liz Walker, and many others, were handing out pamphlets on Wednesday, encouraging locals to appear at city hall's regular council meeting Oct. 5. At issue is Welcome Home, a 72-unit private facility for drug and alcohol recovery, planned for 6925 King George Highway. The first phase, being considered Monday, is a 36-unit facility, which is expected to eventually double in size. Walker says more there are more questions than answers regarding the facility, which she says is too large for "anyone's backyard." Spokesman Bil Koonar said Welcome Home will provide a much-needed service in the city. Drug addicts and alcoholics wanting to break their addictive cycle would stay up to four years, away from the environment that kept them using. Slowly, they'll be given added responsibilities, and shown how to make better decisions. Part of that process will be getting them involved in volunteer work in the community, Koonar said. He said one of the biggest myths in the community is that clients would be wandering around the neighbourhood. In the Welcome Home setting, client containment will be much easier than in a more traditional recovery house setting, he said. Some, including Surrey's mayor, are concerned about the scope of the project. Koonar said there is a similar facility in San Fransisco housing 500 people in the midst of a residential setting, and another in New York with 200 in an upscale nieghbourhood. The project is being funded by philanthropist John Volken, who said the $20-million recovery community will have a host of necessary amenities, including classrooms, an on-site dentist and gymnasium, along with a store where they'll work. Volken is also selling his $5.5-million West Vancouver mansion to live in the Surrey treatment centre. Residents in the area say they're fed up with becoming a dumping ground for social service facilities, including Surrey's largest homeless shelter, situated only two blocks away from Welcome Home. The public hearing begins at city hall at 7 p.m. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart