Pubdate: Tue, 31 May 2011 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Times Colonist Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Richard Watts Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) 'TIME RIGHT FOR SUPERVISED INJECTION SITE IN VICTORIA' On the three-year anniversary of the closure of Victoria' s problem-plagued needle exchange for drug addicts, the former operators are still committed to another try. Katrina Jensen, executive director of the AIDS Vancouver Island, said without a fixed site for passing out clean needles, too many people are left deeply entrenched in drug use without access to health care. "We are still missing an inside location where we can meet with people and build a relationship with them and get them access to health services," said Jensen. On May 31, 2008, AIDS Vancouver Island closed the doors on its former needle exchange on Cormorant Street when its landlord moved to evict. The closure ended for its neighbours a sixyear nightmare of open drug use, drug dealing, discarded needles, blood-smeared refuse and randomly deposited human feces. Since then, AIDS Vancouver Island has passed out clean needles from a moving van to serve street people. Passing out clean needles is primarily a matter of harm reduction, helping to cut back on the spread of infectious diseases like AIDS or hepatitis C through sharing needles. Also, the Vancouver Island Health Authority has moved to make clean needles available in its various community locations, from hospitals to public health offices. This approach was finally adopted after the health authority twice attempted to re-open a fixed site needle exchange at Pandora Avenue and Princess Street. On both occasions the initiatives were abandoned after loud and sustained community objections. Stewart Johnston, whose law offices were located near the Cormorant Street site, said his experience has left him believing any attempt to restart such a facility would be a big "mistake." "We were literally picking up feces regularly, calling the city work crews because we're not equipped to deal with bio-hazardous waste," said Johnston. "A needle exchange, if it's anything like the one we had here, is a 'honey pot.'" he said. "It draws the addicts, it draws the fences to get rid of stolen goods, it draws the prostitutes and it draws the dealers." "You get this great gathering of that particular subculture," said Johnston. But spreading the distribution of clean needles throughout the community, as is now done, prevents such a concentration. "You don't get so much of a honey pot." But back at AIDS Vancouver Island, Jensen said circumstances in Victoria have changed since the operation of the old Cormorant Street site so much that Victoria is now ready for another permanent needle exchange, and also a fixed site for addicts to inject their drugs under medical supervision. "I think we are ready, I think our community is ready, for a supervised injection facilities," she said. Previously, "the tiny little needle exchange, with its two staff, was providing a range of services for a significant number of people, too much of a burden for that service," said Jensen. But in the three years since the Cormorant Street exchange closed, a number of shelters, including Our Place and Rock Bay Landing Shelter, have opened. Needles are being made available throughout the community. And outreach treatment efforts, like the Assertive Community Treatment teams, are helping street people in their own environment. With these outreach efforts in place, a new fixed site needle exchange will not act as the same focus for drug-related behaviour. Now, "my bottom line, before we operate a fixed site, is just to have a location," said Jensen. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom