Pubdate: Mon, 18 Jan 2010 Source: Alberni Valley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Alberni Valley Times Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/albernivalleytimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4043 Author: Shayne Morrow Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) THE HARPER GOVERNMENT IS FIGHTING THE WRONG FIGHT WITH INSITE On Friday, the B.C. Court of Appeal shot down the federal government's attempt to close Insite, the controversial safe injection site in Vancouver's Downtown East side. While one would think that should put an end to the dispute, I'm guessing that by the time you read this, the Harper government will have a petition filed in the Canadian Supreme Court. The site opened in 2003 as part of a multi-pronged program launched by former Mayor Philip Owen that included harm reduction as well as drug enforcement. The concept is simple: give intravenous drug users a safe place to shoot up, clean needles and health care services, and you can reduce the spread of infectious diseases and deaths by overdose. It's pretty easy to die of a narcotic overdose, especially when you're never sure of the quality of the drugs you're injecting. If you OD, however, there is a window of time where an injection of Narcan will save your life. Get it soon enough, you recover quickly. But too late is too late. Over the past six or so years, the front line workers at Insite have proven that the safe injection concept works. Somewhere in the process, trained health care professionals can make one-on-one contact with addicts, and help get them off the street. Unfortunately, harm reduction programs don't always sit well, politically, especially on the right side of the spectrum. It's ironic that Philip Owen, representing the conservative Non Partisan Association, was shoved aside by his own party before his reforms came into being. One sensed that his progressive views on drug addiction were a factor in his political demise. But the current legal wrangling raises red flags on both sides of the debate. If you support Insite, then you naturally feel that the courts have upheld the principles of our Canadian constitution. If you believe that harm reduction equates to condoning and promoting drug use, then you probably feel like a gang of activist judges has just hijacked the democratic process: your elected representatives have created a law, and unelected judges have scuttled it. Obviously, if you're on the winning side, you're happy, but you might be sitting on the wrong side of the fence next time. Then again, you might view the conflict as a defining argument of federal versus provincial powers. Health care is, after all, a provincial responsibility. But drug enforcement laws fall under the federal Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. Somehow, when the smoke clears, we may have a better idea of where the lines are drawn between the competing jurisdictions. Whatever happens with Insite will have a spillover effect in the Valley. We may not have a safe injection site, but we have other harm reduction initiatives, like a needle exchange program, in place. A couple of decades into the age of HIV/AIDS, it's unfortunate that we're still dealing with ideological arguments about whether or not we should tolerate the use of drugs, because that boat sailed a long time ago. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D