Pubdate: Tue, 03 Nov 2015 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant Page: 3 BANNING DRUG ADDICTS FUTILE, JUDGE ARGUES Jane Cartwright says addicts' desperate need for a fix trumps court orders for prohibition from Kelowna's 'red zone,' and where else in town can homeless drugusers find places to eat and sleep? Drugs keep addicted people coming back to Kelowna's downtown, and the courts are hard-pressed to bar them completely because that's where they get help, says a Kelowna judge. Responding to Mayor Colin Basran's comment that court-ordered punishments rarely deter drug dealers from Kelowna's core area, Judge Jane Cartwright said addicts often get their fix by selling drugs. Their habits are so entrenched, they ignore no-go orders that prohibit them from the downtown red zone. "Drug addiction is so powerful that women will use drugs when they're pregnant because nothing is more important than getting their drugs," she said. "With a red-zone order, how is that going to deter you when you're in the grips of a substantial hard-drug addiction? It's not the fault of the justice system or the police. It's the fact we're recognizing how powerful these drugs are." Residents of an Abbott Street condominium complain drug activity is rampant in City Park and authorities are doing too little to control the problem. In an interview last week, Basran agreed street-level drug crime has spiked in the last year and said the justice system is too lenient on repeat offenders. Cartwright argues the courts can clear people out so they can't buy drugs or cause havoc downtown, but many of them stay at Kelowna's Gospel Mission on Leon Avenue and get services from agencies nearby. "If people can't access them, they can't eat or have anywhere to sleep. When you push them all out, you might be setting up new crime zones," she said. Members of the RCMP's downtown enforcement unit know who the regular offenders are and pick up people all the time when they man the red zone, said Cartwright. The problem is what to do with a drunk or drug addict who keeps returning. Lawyer Wayne Jennings calls it a revolving door. He had one homeless client who served time at the Kamloops jail for red-zone infractions in Kelowna. After his release, he got a bus ticket and went straight back to downtown Kelowna to score more drugs. A judge barred another of his clients from the Queensway bus loop and area surrounding City Hall. Within days, RCMP had picked him up for drinking there four times. They kept releasing him until he'd accumulated four breach charges. "Now he's hooped again," Jennings said. "The freaking guy couldn't stay away from the bus loop. . . . The addicted ones risk everything because they need a fix." Kelowna's red zone is generally framed by Sutherland Avenue to Doyle, and from Richter Street to Okanagan Lake. Jennings, who lives on Sutherland, knows many street people and sees them on the edges of the red zone where police can't arrest them. "It's displacing them," he said. "Is it just for the optics? Or is it for dispersal so there's a net benefit for Kelowna?" Residents say the street dealing was particularly bad during the summer. The number of people in custody tends to spike during the hotter months because more transients are travelling through town. Still, lawyer Gavin Jones believes charges for trafficking, drug possession and minor theft downtown are holding steady. He sees many people booked for breaching a red-zone order, but it's nothing unusual. Repeat offenders are often barred from downtown, but not always by the courts. Police can have them sign a document to stay out. If an offender sleeps at the Gospel Mission, he must get permission from a bail supervisor to stay there and leave the red zone in the morning. Some lawyers accuse RCMP of setting up addicts for failure by repeatedly citing someone for breaching a red-zone restriction until he racks up enough charges to face a judge and ends up in jail. Jones says the Mounties are being nice. "If you're a police officer and you get a guy for being in the red zone or not carrying his order and having a beer, I think you're kind of giving him a break by saying 'I'm going to charge you but release you,'" he said. "If the guy keeps doing it, it catches up to him." Andrew Vandersluys, a veteran Legal Aid lawyer, disagrees. He understands police are trying to keep the downtown core accessible to tourists and shoppers worried about being accosted. But repeat offenders are generally unsophisticated and impulsive; many don't consider the consequences of breaching a red-zone order, he said. "They end up wandering into the red zone because that's their home. That's familiar ground. . . . If you're going to go the route of approving charges, you've got to put him in front of a judge sooner than just letting him run up a tab, as it were." The not-in-my-backyard approach fails to address the main issue - how to balance keeping the downtown core safe with the needs of a vulnerable population, Vandersluys said. Jail can help some people rehabilitate because experts are available to help them, but it's an expensive strategy. Funding rehab facilities would be cheaper, said Cartwright, who'd like to see more family intervention and resources for pregnant women who shouldn't be pregnant. "If it's a hopeless situation, we need to help the social workers get in there quicker. And then we need to move the kids through the courts more quickly because we'll remove a child at birth and a year later we're having the trial. "By that time, that poor baby has been attached to the foster mother and is either going to an adoptive home or back to the parent, causing lifelong problems." Addicts and perennial offenders have often suffered neglect and horrible childhoods. Politicians are afraid to push for more family intervention because they don't see any improvement within a term of office or two, Cartwright said. Longer prison terms and tougher laws, she says, are not the answer. "You need to fund early-childhood intervention. You can be tougher on crime, fine - just spend more money warehousing people. Then they'll get out and there's no services. They remember the only thing they had going for them in their life was that high, and they're back on." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom