Pubdate: Sat, 31 Oct 2009 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Larry Campbell, Neil Boyd and Lori Culbert Series Part 1: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n976/a05.html Series Part 2: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n979/a08.html HOMELESSNESS KNOWS NO CITY BORDERS Problems Facing Downtown Eastside's Unhoused Are Challenges For All Levels Of Government This is a condensed version of Chapter 17 of the new book A Thousand Dreams: Vancouver's Downtown Eastside and the Fight for Its Future. When Gregor Robertson, a businessman and former NDP MLA, became the city's new mayor in November 2008, he announced tackling homelessness would be his first priority. But homelessness and the other problems facing the Downtown Eastside are challenges not just for that neighbourhood or for the city of Vancouver. They are problems that all levels of government -- municipal, regional, provincial, and federal - -- must tackle, and all of them will have to come to the table if meaningful solutions are to be found. Ending Homelessness Homeless people continue to die on the streets of Vancouver. In December 2008, a 47-year-old woman known only as Tracey burned to death in a cardboard shelter she had erected over her shopping cart on an unusually chilly Vancouver night. She had lit some candles in a feeble effort to keep herself warm, and her body was found smouldering in the cart just before dawn. Even if Tracey had wanted to come inside, there is not always a place to stay, regardless of the weather: the Triage Shelter routinely turns away 400 to 600 people a month because it is full. Lookout and other shelters report a similar situation. Most experts agree that Vancouver currently has at least 2,000 homeless people, the vast majority of them in the Downtown Eastside. The Metro Vancouver region needs a supportive housing plan for all of its 28 municipalities, Larry Campbell and Neil Boyd believe. Every city has challenges with drugs and homelessness, and the problems can't be defined by the borders of a municipality. A coordinated approach should be overseen by a regional council on homelessness and run by veteran bureaucrats from city halls; mayors and councillors often have polarized views, and they usually serve only one or two terms in power. Some of the new social housing needs to be in the Downtown Eastside, close to services for the marginalized; some needs to be outside that area, for the working poor and recovering addicts. A coordinated policy will also be needed to deal with NIMBYs, the not-in-my-back-yard people who don't want social housing on their residential streets, despite the reality that the folks affected could have grown up in their neighbourhoods. What the Downtown Eastside needs is not more shelters, everyone agrees. The goal, Campbell and Boyd say, should be more supported units run by non-profit agencies who specialize in this work, stalwarts like RainCity and the Portland Hotel Society. RainCity executive director Mark Smith estimates that Metro Vancouver needs 3,000 new social housing units to put a dent in the homelessness crisis which is ravaging the Downtown Eastside. Successful social housing must be geared to providing proper long-term accommodation with private bathrooms and kitchens. Most buildings will need ongoing medical and social support systems, according to Smith, because many future tenants will be mentally ill and/or addicted people who have been abandoned by the system for so long that they have little hope of ever leading so-called normal lives. "Do we think any of these folks are going to get to a point where they get a job and commute in from the suburbs each day? No, that's never going to happen. The population we see are so isolated and entrenched in addiction," Smith says. "They are owed supportive housing by all of us, because in many respects we put them where they are today." Smith believes homelessness can be wiped out. "We could end homelessness if there was the will and the resources were there. And we have the resources in this country." When the federal Liberals were defeated in 2006, they left a $17 billion government surplus. The Conservatives diminished that surplus by a third in order to shave 1 per cent off the GST. Even half of that 1 per cent cut -- $3 billion -- easily would have funded the construction of enough supportive housing to fill the need right across the country, Campbell and Boyd say. Many people believe that if we are determined to end homelessness and ease the burden on the medical system caused by entrenched drug users, we need a countrywide housing strategy that requires the provinces to match federal funding and cities to provide the land for the developments. With the economy struggling and government deficits soaring, a national housing strategy may seem further away than ever. But Campbell and Boyd both believe it is crucial to begin building, even in an uncertain financial environment. Supportive housing and treatment resources will cost a tremendous amount, they admit, but those services will ultimately save society money by reducing the high cost of people revolving repeatedly through the justice, health, and social service systems. Once people are in a home and stabilized, there will be opportunities for some to get off welfare and to work and pay taxes. "Everyone in Canada should care about this. So many people are one pay cheque away from having their financial security crumble," Campbell says. "Whose responsibility is homelessness? It's everyone's responsibility." Improving Treatment A shocking February 2008 Vancouver Police Department report found that 49 per cent of police calls for service in the Downtown Eastside involved a mentally ill person, which Darrell Burnham, of Coast Mental Health, says is proof that many vulnerable street people haven't been supported properly for years. "I think there's a ton of people who need help, but they are sent to jail or a shelter or sent to a soup kitchen," says Burnham, whose organization receives funding from all three levels of government to provide services and housing to the mentally ill. As a solution, Burnham champions new social housing--including so-called wet buildings, which allow drug use and methadone treatment--built outside the Downtown Eastside to get vulnerable people away from victimizers and opportunists. Burnham says many mentally ill people in the Downtown Eastside today don't even have a diagnosis. Those with an active addiction or who are "rough around the edges" are often excluded from existing mental health services. The Strathcona mental health clinic in the Downtown Eastside is more inclusive, Burnham says, and does wonderful work, but the staff there are overloaded, seeing an estimated 125 clients a day. The province's new 100-bed Centre for Mental Health & Addiction in Burnaby, opened in 2008 to treat some of the most difficult-to-reach people on the streets, is a start, Larry Campbell says, but many more long-term beds are required to stabilize people before they can move into supportive housing. Much as some people might shudder at the suggestion, Campbell says, the quickest way to get hundreds of people off the street and into care would be to reopen Riverview, which is now almost empty as remaining patients are being transferred to newer, smaller mental health facilities across the province. "When I was a Mountie," Campbell says, "if someone was mentally ill you arrested them and took them to the hospital for assessment, then drove straight to Riverview. I think there's still a need for a place like that, for ... many of the chronics, for example, identified by the Vancouver police report. In many cases now they are treated and back out in a short time with medication." Such an approach, of course, would only be an answer for those willing to accept help once they got to a place like Riverview. Many more drug-treatment beds are also need in B.C. Treatment needs to include a wide range of options, since the same solution will not work for every addict, and be situated within a system that is easy to access and non-judgmental. There must be sufficient detox beds for drug users to be admitted the same day they make the request, Neil Boyd says, and the system must be tolerant enough not to reject people who need to go through detox five, ten, or twenty times before it sticks. Critics must remember how often smokers try to butt out or drinkers try to sober up before they are successful; those with drug addictions are no different. Once patients have gone through detox, there must be many more transitional beds where marginalized people can stay while waiting to get into long-term recovery programs. The system also must continue providing treatment beds specified for women and youth. And for those who are diagnosed with both a mental illness and an addiction, Boyd says, we need treatment services that address both challenges at the same time. Embracing the Four Pillars -- Prevention, Treatment, Enforcement, and Harm Reduction The Downtown Eastside no longer has the worst rate of HIV infection in the Western world, as Dr. Julio Montaner had declared in 1997, but the situation remains dire. Vancouver Coastal Health recently pegged the death rate from HIV-related diseases in the Downtown Eastside at 38 times greater than that in the rest of B.C. Other studies have offered even higher estimates. The medical system still doesn't serve the community's marginalized population, Montaner says, and in his opinion continuing to ignore that is "genocide" -- the deliberate extermination of a specific group. The solution starts, he says, with better housing, better social services, and better mental health support. Donald MacPherson, author of the four pillars report and still city hall's drug policy coordinator, is also disappointed the blueprint he drew up hasn't resulted in more change. "Basically, we should be farther ahead on all of the pillars. We need more harm reduction, we need a couple more injection sites, we need more treatment. Prevention almost isn't even on the map. It's stunning how slow change has been, considering the public support," MacPherson says today. Campbell and Boyd advocate a future drug policy that supports a continuum of care for people, serving everybody from the person who can quit by simply abstaining to the person who can get stable only if a doctor is prescribing him or her heroin. "If abstinence-based treatment worked for everyone, we wouldn't even be having this discussion," Campbell points out. To move towards a harm reduction strategy, say Campbell and Boyd, it's imperative to remove the stigma from addiction, which is now a crime. Legalize marijuana, says Campbell, and "tax the hell out of it," with the money collected going into treatment programs for those addicted to harder drugs. The NAOMI project in Vancouver and Montreal and countless trials in Europe have demonstrated that heroin prescribed by a doctor to entrenched addicts can lead to improvements in both the rates of crime and the physical and mental health of users -- all without allowing supply to migrate into the illicit market. The onus, Boyd says, is now on senior governments to support heroin maintenance through Criminal Code exemptions and funding. Another shift many harm reduction advocates support is the decriminalization of prostitution. It is a controversial stance, reviled by some service agencies and family members who argue public action should instead be directed towards arresting johns and getting women out of prostitution altogether. But Campbell and Boyd, along with some Aboriginal leaders and community activists, argue that women forced into the survival sex trade need safer working conditions until they can get out. Improving Aboriginal Health and Well-Being At Vancouver Native Health's Positive Outlook clinic only about 130 of its 400 HIV-positive clients, for a variety of systemic reasons, are receiving life-prolonging antiretroviral AIDS drugs. "Our death rate is still unacceptably high at our clinic. It is still ten per cent each year, similar to sub-Saharan Africa," says executive director Doreen Littlejohn. Aboriginal people, she adds, are still becoming infected at the highest rate in Canada, despite all the harm reduction advancements that have been made. Littlejohn's boss at Vancouver Native Health, Lou Demerais, is realistic about the situation, though he confesses to being an eternal optimist. "The AIDS thing notwithstanding, the Hepatitis C notwithstanding, the lousy housing that has been allowed to be perpetuated notwithstanding," he says, Aboriginal people in the Downtown Eastside are healthier today than they were when he helped start the Vancouver Native Health Society clinic in 1991. As a senator, Larry Campbell continues to lobby for funding that would allow the Native Friendship Centre to construct an Urban Native Youth Association building. The idea, first proposed during the years Campbell was mayor, would give Aboriginal teens a safe place to hang out. "There's a huge issue with Aboriginal youth and gangs in Winnipeg. Vancouver will have that problem unless we help youth move in a better direction," Campbell says. Strengthening Community Pride Among the many successes in the Downtown Eastside, the most striking has been the ability of marginalized people to organize and advocate for themselves. DERA, VANDU, and various Carnegie Centre groups have accomplished much over the years. The staff at non-profit agencies, as well as nurses and outreach workers who have committed their lives to supporting the area's residents, have also brought energy to the neighbourhood. There is an unmistakable sense of community in the Downtown Eastside, from the celebration of small milestones in a struggling person's life at the Portland Hotel to the athletic, academic, cultural, and entertainment programs run out of the Carnegie Centre. Poet Bud Osborn is confident about the future of his resilient neighbourhood, which he calls the "spiritual heart" of Vancouver. "This is my community, and I had never known what a community was, or a family," Osborn says. "This is the first place I didn't feel out of place." The challenge, people agree, will be to keep the Downtown Eastside a community but make it a healthier one in the future. All levels of government and every caring citizen should want to participate in that vision. A Thousand Dreams: Vancouver's Downtown Eastside and the Fight for Its Future is published by Greystone Books, an imprint of D&M Publishers Inc., and available in bookstores Saturday. A Thousand Dreams: Vancouver's Downtown Eastside and the Fight for Its Future, written by Larry Campbell, Neil Boyd and Lori Culbert, reaches book stores on Saturday. The book, which chronicles the history of this neighbourhood and makes recommendations for its future, is a collaboration by Vancouver's former chief coroner and mayor; oft-quoted Simon Fraser University criminologist Neil Boyd; and Vancouver Sun reporter Lori Culbert. The Sun is publishing condensed versions of three chapters from the book. Thursday: Lethal Heroin, Killer Coke, and Expo 86 Chapter 3 is set in the 1980s and early '90s, when drug addiction began to escalate in the neighbourhood. Friday: Canada's First Supervised Injection Site Chapter 12 looks at one of the key harm-reduction initiatives to combat drug addiction. Today: The Road Ahead Chapter 17 calls for solutions to make the neighbourhood healthier and raises crucial questions for other large North American cities. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr