Pubdate: Tue, 02 Jun 2015 Source: Cambridge Times (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Metroland Contact: http://www.cambridgetimes.ca/cambridge-on/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3423 Author: Joe Lethbridge TAKE A SERIOUS LOOK AT DRUG USE, SOCIAL ISSUES HELP CAMBRIDGE - Just a few weeks ago, about 30 people met at the amphitheatre behind Galt Collegiate Institute. The event was called "Taking Back Our Rivers." It was just after the event planner was walking his dogs, as many people do along the river, came upon discarded hypodermic needles and other discarded paraphernalia and trash. Eleven bags of trash and 20 needles were collected, 11 of which were found in a drug den bellow the CPR bridge. It is not just dogs we have to worry about. We have families walking together. We have children running along the path, as kids can, full of excitement. We have people wearing flip flops and sandals. Prior to the event itself, many of us wrote to different levels of government and departments. We received few answers. For some of us, we have been left with more questions than before. In reference to how many needles and sharps containers are given out and returned, as of writing this - no response. In reference to whether public health has plans for safer injection sites or secured used needle drop boxes - no foreseeable plans. There were no reasons given for the answer supplied. In my follow-up e-mail I asked what factors determined the answer. I have not received a reply. Is it cost prohibitive? Do we not have a problem with drug use in Cambridge or the region? Is drug use the proverbial needle in the haystack no one wants to find? Will the drug den found under the CPR bridge, in close proximity to Galt Collegiate Institute, be filled in? Will anyone decide which government level, department or agency will do something about it or will we hear "that is out of our jurisdiction?" I truly wish people would take a serious look at the issue of drug use. While I know illicit drug use will not go away, can we not lessen the harm to the public? One needle dropped into a secured used needle box is a start. Safe injection sites set up elsewhere are prepared for potential overdoses. I also know it is not solely a drug issue. It is a social issue - it affects users' friends and families and the public . I know of no one who woke up one day and said "I think I will stick a needle in my arm" or "I think I will cook up household products and smoke it". Have we taken the focus and funding away from social issues? For many users, homelessness, poverty, mental health issues and drug use coincide. While not all will seek help and we may lose the war on drugs, should we not avail all means to help, giving users and ourselves a fighting chance? Do we throw our hands in the air like we just don't care? Do we walk past discarded needles and hope someone else will deal with it? Place a simple call to police. They will send someone out. Do we walk past a drug user and describe them as "one of them" or a "crack whore?" Doing so only exacerbates the issues. Do we sweep it under the rug saying "it is everywhere"? I truly hope not. We are lacking in help for social issues and some of us lack in social graces. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt