Pubdate: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 Source: Outlook, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Black Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/o9Mc9WZ6 Website: http://www.northshoreoutlook.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1433 Author: Greg Hoekstra SHATTERING THE SILENCE Standing outside his West 1st Street home in North Vancouver, Squamish Nation elder Sam George surveys the damage inflicted on his vehicle during the early hours of Aug. 23. "That's probably what they used right there," says George, pointing to a large, jagged rock lying beneath his pickup truck. "That's what they used to smash the windshield." Around 3 a.m. on Monday morning George woke to a loud crashing sound, but thinking it was a passing train, he fell back asleep. It wasn't until hours later that he discovered the caved-in windshield, which he's convinced is a message from a clan of local drug users. "I think they're trying to intimidate me," says George. "They're trying to scare me into not talking." For more than a year now, George says drug activity and violence at a residence on the reserve has been spiraling out of control. The home, says George, is a known haven for crack and heroin users, with as many as 15 to 20 people staying there at a time. Police are called to the home upwards of three to four times a week, sometimes with guns drawn, says George. Yelling and screaming can be heard from the house almost nightly, and on one occasion, George says he witnessed a fight spill out of the residence and onto the street. "One of the guys fighting was yelling for his friends to get his machete," recalls George. Last month, George finally decided that enough was enough. Sitting in front of his family's computer, the Squamish elder drafted a scathing letter detailing what he's personally witnessed, then distributed it to every house on the reserve. In the letter, George calls on members of the Squamish Nation to band together and stand up to the small minority of drug users who are disrupting peace in their community. What's more, George says the majority of people he's seen coming and going to the residence are not members of the Squamish Nation. "I'd say 98 per cent of them are non-band members," says George. "These people don't belong on the reserve." But because the owner of the home is a band member, George says evicting him or her is not an option. In an email to The Outlook RCMP Cpl. Peter DeVries said police are unable to confirm whether there is one particular problem house on the North Vancouver reserve due to regulations in the Privacy Act. However, DeVries did say that police "are aware of problems on the Squamish reserve and are actively working with the leaders of the Squamish Nation to root out those elements of the community that disturb what is an otherwise peaceful community." He then added that "some of those problems surround drugs and violence." Squamish Nation Chief Gibby Jacob was unavailable for comment on the issue, but last week, during a press conference regarding a drive-by shooting on the Capilano Reserve, Jacob made a plea to members of his community to stop the spread of violence. "To the very few in our community who are perpetuating this, I would say stop. It is your family who you are hurting. Not the outside world, but your own family," said Jacob. Standing side-by-side, Jacob and DeVries pledged to work together to restore law and order to the generally peaceful communities. For Sam George, peace and quiet can't come soon enough to the neighbourhood where he lives with his wife, Marlene, and nine-month-old granddaughter. And, despite the damage recently inflicted on his truck, George says he still hopes those who are responsible seek the help they truly need. "Every time we have a ceremony I pray they will go to treatment," he says. "But they have to want to be helped, and I just don't think they're at that place yet." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D