Pubdate: Thu, 26 Jan 2017 Source: Metro (Vancouver, CN BC) Copyright: 2017 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/vancouver Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3775 Author: Jen St. Denis FRONTLINE WORKERS PAN FUNDS DECISION Vancouver acts but Downtown eastside community opposes overdose funds for new policing Vancouver council has approved $2.1 million in spending to fight the city's deadly overdose crisis, including a controversial $208,000 to create a community policing centre in Strathcona. Drug users and their advocates vociferously opposed the funds going toward the new community policing centre. They said more policing is not an appropriate response to a public health crisis and suggested the money would be better spent supporting groups like the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users and Portland Hotel Society in opening more overdose prevention sites and doing peer-to-peer outreach to encourage drug users to come inside or out of their isolated SRO hotel rooms. "Police are not trusted by the community in the Downtown Eastside," said Matthew Kargis, who has volunteered for several months at an overdose prevention site. "People trained as medical first responders, people with medical skills in addiction medicine, mental-health workers, frontline organizations like VANDU these are the people who prevent overdoses." Doug King, a lawyer with Pivot Legal, pointed out that an extra property tax increase had been levied specifically to raise $3.5 million to address the deadly health crisis, which killed 219 Vancouver residents in 2016. "In our opinion, community policing has virtually no connection to overdose prevention and it has no connection to harm reduction," he said. The Strathcona Residents' Association and Strathcona Business Improvement Area spoke in support of the community policing centre, saying discarded needles and property crime are an increasing problem in the neighbourhood. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt