Pubdate: Fri, 19 Mar 2010 Source: Victoria News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Black Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wOQxPi2c Website: http://www.vicnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267 Author: Roszan Holmen NEEDLE EXCHANGE TAKES LEADERSHIP When word got out through the media about a potential new needle exchange on Princess Avenue, a funny thing happened. All the voices of the activists for harm-reduction services got drowned out by a handful of neighbours. Their outcry totally dominated public discussion. Over and over through the media, they asked: How could the health authority break its promise by considering a site so close to schools and families? But where was the other side of the argument? Where were the demonstrators who marched in the street on the anniversary of the closure of the Cormorant Street needle exchange? Where was the mayor? Where was the police chief? While the Princess proposal had its merits and drawbacks, the silence from community leaders let emotion take over. The Vancouver Island Health Authority quickly abandoned the idea before it got a chance to be thoroughly vetted. City council has for years been supportive of harm-reduction services, but it's not council's job to run them. This was Mayor Dean Fortin's message, loud and clear, after a passionate public meeting on the topic: the city isn't in a position to fund health services. The city also isn't responsible for setting health policy. That's the job of the Vancouver Island Health Authority. People upset by the status quo shouldn't be screaming at their councillors, added Coun. Lynn Hunter. Well, fair enough. It's not council's job. But neither is it council's job to take a lead on affordable and supportive housing. That's the line we heard often from previous mayors -- but not this one. We can't wait around for the province. That seems to be the new guiding philosophy at city hall. And it seems to be working. With the support of his councillors, Fortin has made a significant contribution to getting people off the streets. This includes more than just a handful of housing projects, ranging from below-market downtown condos to complexes designed to house and support those coming off the streets. The cost to municipal property taxpayers is around $2 million, but the payoff is much greater. By taking the lead, the city secured much greater contributions from higher levels of government. The lesson: municipal leadership gets results. If applied to a fixed needle exchange, I bet progress would be just as swift. That's not to say the city should have necessarily given the Princess Avenue proposal a green light. The neighbours had good reason to be fearful. They'd been given no concrete reasons to believe the new fixed site would be better than the last failed experiment. If approved, the facility would have been the only gig in town, promising the same honey-pot effect as the one on Cormorant Street. The landscape, however, is changing. Within the next three months, the health authority will roll out needle-exchange service in most of its health facilities. This distributed model isn't the whole solution, but it's a step in the right direction. The next step is opening a permanent facility dedicated to drug users, offering needle exchange and other related supports. Because it won't be the only place in town to get a clean needle, the stress to the host community will be lessened. The science is clear that such a facility is needed. VIHA, however, has backed right down from its promises to deliver it. Now, we just need a strong advocate to put the pressure on. Mayor Fortin? Police Chief Jamie Graham? - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D