Pubdate: Wed, 20 Oct 2010 Source: Tri-City News (Port Coquitlam, CN BC) Website: http://www.tricitynews.com/ Feedback: http://drugsense.org/url/3X3xlf9Y Address: 1405 Broadway St., Port Coquitlam, B.C. V3C 6L6 Copyright: 2010 Tri-City News Author: Sarah Payne MEETING IS TONIGHT ON SECURE CARE A local justice group will be exploring the issue of secure care - incarcerating at-risk youth - at a debate next week. Under the Secure Care Act, authorities would be able to arrest young people involved in prostitution or extreme drug use and place them in a secured facility until they can be stabilized. The Tri-Cities Joint Family Court and Youth Justice Committee is hosting the event tonight (Wednesday) to gauge public opinion on the matter before endorsing the efforts of the South Fraser committee to get it back on the provincial government's radar. "It started with the Secure Care Act back when the NDP was just leaving office" in 2000, said Alexander Bell, a member and former chair of the Tri-Cities Youth Justice Committee. "When the [BC] Liberals came in, they said they would review the more contentious issues and bring it forward again but that never happened." Secure care legislation is in place across the prairie provinces and Ontario, and Bell said the Youth Justice Committee wants to hear what people have to say on both sides of the controversial issue. "There are pros and cons to the idea of arresting people and incarcerating them without a trial for their own good," he said. The public forum at Douglas College's David Lam Campus will include Diane Sowden of the Children of the Street Society speaking for the legislation and Jerome Bouvier of PoCoMo Youth Services speaking against it. Rob Gordon, director of SFU's School of Criminology, will discuss the historical background of the Secure Care Act while Colin Campbell of Douglas College's criminology department will moderate the discussion. A question-and-answer session will follow the debate. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt