Pubdate: Thu, 14 May 2015 Source: Chilliwack Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Chilliwack Times Contact: http://www.chilliwacktimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1357 Author: Paul J. Henderson LET'S PLAY CRACK SHACK WHACK-A-MOLE Let the game of crack shack whack-a-mole begin. After a police bust of a well-known drug house next to Chilliwack secondary school last week, residents breathed a sigh of relief. And as arrests were made, other junkies and dealers-who tormented the area for years-cursed and gestured rudely at neighbours who watched them scurry away like cockroaches when the lights come on. The issue of the so-called crack shack in a neighbourhood is not exclusive to downtown Chilliwack. This is a problem in every city to varying degrees. (As for the term "crack shack," it's likely not accurate since most of them are users of crystal meth. Semantics.) Insensitive? Politically incorrect? Were the meth-heads and drug dealers and prostitutes who lived or came and went at all hours from this house "human" just like the rest of us? Yes, but most of them were also jerks. Some of them likely have mental health issues, and many or all have addiction issues. But let's be honest, most of these people are just insensitive jerks. Selfish, sociopathic, sadistic, stupid . . . however you want to put it. Residents of this small cul-de-sac in Chilliwack next to a high school have complained for years about criminal behaviour at one house and then another. Things hit the news in 2013when people making hash oil in the basement of the house next to Rotary Street resident Deborah Walker started a fire and trashed the house. Then they moved across the street and the trouble just grew until last week's crackdown. Issues such as this sometimes divide along political lines. But there is a grey area between the lock-em-up-and-throw-away-the-key folks and the woe-is-the-poor-drug-addict folks. There will be no locking up and throwing away keys for petty thefts and minor drug possession charges. And while some may spew platitudes about reasons some of these folks are the way they are, there is a difference between a reason and an excuse. Sympathy is hard to find, particularly when there is no contrition from the folks I saw stumbling out of 9562 Rotary St. on May 7. There was only belligerence and ignorance. There was also a lot of nonsense spewed by owner Denvar Van Rooi as he played innocent, while interacting with the woman known by neighbours to be the "madam" of the house. Van Rooi knows exactly what went on at his property and after years of complaints, only reacted when the situation hit the media. And even then, he didn't and doesn't care. The day after claiming innocence in a TV interview, Walker tells me Van Rooi was joking with the madam about their 15 minutes of fame. Mayor Sharon Gaetz isn't particularly sympathetic with landlords such as Van Rooi, either. "The landlord always holds culpability in this regard," Gaetz said. "We encourage landlords to ensure that they have taken out a criminal record check on their tenants. We could avoid a lot of issues if people did that." So where are the people who came and went from the Rotary Street crack shack now? There were the low-level dealers in SUVs with shaved heads and regrettable tattoos giving neighbours the finger as they came and went. There were the belligerent stumbling junkie/thieves yanking on car doors, wandering into backyards to steal whatever, or just fighting or screaming on the streets at 2 a.m. But after the bust, they are all gone, right? Of course not. The people, the dozens and dozens of people (166 in one 10-hour stretch counted by Walker one day) are still somewhere. A handful of them are in jail but it's unlikely any of them will spend substantial time behind bars. So where are they now? A resident of Third Avenue contacted me about the Rotary Street bust: "Those people have moved in two doors down from me and I have two small children. I dont know what to do." Walker is sympathetic and, after her incredibly difficult experience, the PR professional says she should offer assistance on how to get rid of meth/crack shacks and those who perpetuate them in local neighbourhoods. "As happy as we are to see them go, I wouldn't wish this nightmare on anybody," she tells me. Wednesday morning the Third Avenue resident said her problem was already solved. She contacted the owner, who dealt with police and the squatters at the house were kicked out. The cockroaches of Rotary Street are gone, but you can be sure they'll scurry somewhere. Hopefully your neighbourhood isn't next. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt