Pubdate: Thu, 23 Mar 2017 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2017 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Authors: Dale Bass and Andrea Klassen QUESTIONS REMAIN ON DRUG-USE SITES Business groups and residents on both sides of the river are taking a wait-and-see approach to news a supervised drug-use clinic will spend time in their neighbourhoods. Gay Pooler, general manager of the Kamloops Central Business Improvement Association (KCBIA), said the location chosen by the Interior Health Authority for its South Shore location is not one recommended by her association. The KCBIA had proposed sites other than Crossroads Inn at Seymour Street and Sixth Avenue, a facility run by ASK Wellness Centre and the current location of an overdose-prevention site. Across the river, Steve Puhallo, executive director of the North Shore Business Improvement Association (NSBIA), said he is concerned about the impact the service will have when the RV used for the clinic is parked in the North Shore business area, outside ASK Wellness at Tranquille Road and Aspen Street. However, like Pooler, Puhallo said he is going to wait and see what flows from the travelling supervised drug-use clinic once the federal government grants approval. Both Pooler and Puhallo said their concerns are not rooted in the creation of the clinic, which will see a modified RV operate Tuesdays to Saturdays from 11:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m., moving according to a preordained schedule between the two sites. They understand why the health authority has opted for the service in response to the province's declaration of a health emergency amid record overdose-death numbers. However, they both said they must also protect the interests of their business improvement members and residents who are key to both market areas. Pooler said she is aware ASK Wellness executive director Bob Hughes has expressed some skepticism about the locations and said she will be watching for any problems in the area. Crossroads is not surrounded by many active businesses and, as an ASK facility, the surrounding neighbours have lived with the fact the facility serves a marginalized population. Desert Gardens resident Mae Maxfield said the seniors complex across the road from Crossroads has struggled to deal with drug-use issues. She said Desert Gardens' back stairs have been a hot spot for drug use and sexual activity and have frequently doubled as a public toilet. Maxfield is hopeful the mobile unit may lead to some improvements. Her strata has agreed to fence off access to the stairs and, when residents met with Interior Health and Kamloops RCMP, they were told more foot patrols are being planned near the clinic. "I think we can learn to live with it," Maxfield said. "If we can work together to make things better, that's what we're trying to do." Puhallo hopes the service works, but said he will be watching for any disruption in commercial, retail and residential property values in the area. He is also concerned about the proximity between the ASK office and Spirit Square just behind it, noting the NSBIA is trying to increase use of the public space that was created from a program then-premier Gordon Campbell devised in 2010 to celebrate the province's 150th anniversary as a Crown colony. "Something like this has never been in a town our size," Puhallo said of the supervised drug-use clinic. "The only reference for it is in the [Vancouver] Downtown Eastside and our concern is will this crash the area?" The NSBIA's biggest fear is the fate of the now-tamed area, designated years ago by the RCMP as a red zone, which gave courts enhanced powers to ban sex-trade workers and others involved in illicit activity. "This is not about not wanting to help people," Puhallo said, "but we are concerned about it creating a potential massing effect." Hughes said the RV will likely be set up in the parking lot behind ASK Wellness, taking up all available spots for staff. Mitchell Forgie, owner of Red Beard Cafe, which operates just a few doors down from ASK Wellness, at Tranquille Road and Yew Street, said he doesn't see a problem with drugs in the area and thinks the support services that will be in place around the clinic make a return to the red-zone days unlikely. "My only fear is that I believe this project is politically motivated rather than actually tailored to the needs of users," Forgie said. "Therefore, if it isn't working, I don't expect it to change or stop." Pooler and Puhallo are still awaiting specific details about its operation, including the size of the RV to be used. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt