Pubdate: Mon, 05 Jul 1999 Source: Vancouver Sun (Canada) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 1999 Contact: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Patrick Nagle THE GOOD GUYS LOST THE WAR ON DRUGS Drug addiction is a disease, not an indicator of the user's lack of moral fibre. Sweeping it under the rug will not make it go away. VICTORIA - While it is always unkind to look a gift horse in the mouth, the recent federal promise to spend more money in British Columbia on drug and alcohol abuse programs really has no teeth in it at all. Health Minister Allan Rock is doing his thing as a potential federal Liberal leadership candidate by putting up $3.2-million worth of Ottawa cash for community programs here. David Anderson, the Victoria Liberal kingmaker is delighted to be associated with the announcement. And certainly Premier Glen Clark will not turn back the money even though he can rightly claim the feds are intruding (again) on provincial turf. In real perspective, the recently offered $3.2 million for B.C. -- even if it all went directly to programs and not to bureaucrats (which is impossible to believe) -- does not even come close to the street value of the last RCMP drug bust. The availability of street drugs in B.C. and across Canada is a national scandal and attempts to mitigate the damage of this traffic by means of picayune amounts of money released at photo-ops does not obviate government responsibility. The city of Victoria's clumsy attempt to sweep the problem under the rug by declaring most of the downtown a "red zone" has failed to stand up in court, leaving the streets as busy as ever with pimps, prostitutes and pushers. Victoria has also cut service funding for street people in the general round of budgetary fine-tuning that has occupied all governments in the past five years. The sad fact is that no one in public office anywhere in this country seems to have the grit to stand up and say: We have to get at the root of the drug problem, no matter what it costs. The first thing such a leader would have to do is unbend the twisted public mindset that attributes drug addiction to the individual user's lack of moral fibre. By any measurement, drug addiction is a disease, not some quasi-religious malleability of backbone that only requires the individual to straighten up and fly right. The disease is permanent and dangerous. Just consider the unhappy lapse of Victorian Stephen Reid, ex-convict and author, family man, clean of dope for 10 years and out of debt to society by way of years in the penitentiary. Mr. Reid's relapse into drug-induced illness culminated in a frightening bank robbery attempt and police shootout in the Cook Street Village, one of Victoria's quietest neighbourhoods. These tabloid events had nothing to do with the man's morality, or lack thereof. They were the predictable and unhappy products of a mind clinically diseased by drug abuse. All credible clinicians and scientists agree on treatment. Only careful and long-term detoxification can suppress --not cure -- drug addiction. Even the best treatments can claim only something like a 25-per-cent success rate on the first go-round with a deeply addicted person. In Mr. Reid's case, at his age and with his record, there is no alternative but to face the charges and hope, somehow, that there is room for him in the justice system. But how does this speak to the young, to those next in line to experience the whirling gyre where the centre never holds? Once again, the record is not helpful. The recently-reported experiences of Ken and Linda Barton should give all British Columbians pause to consider what their governments are really doing about drug addiction. In order to save their teen-aged addict son from further damage in a drug-blighted life, Mr. and Mrs. Barton sold their White Rock home and moved to Calgary where the boy was enrolled in the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre. This is not what people have in mind when they say they are moving to Alberta to get away from the New Democratic Party and Premier Clark's economic mismanagement. The Alberta detox recovery program is not a medicare program. The Bartons have paid with their economic lives for their son's treatment. And they are not alone. It should be evident to anyone with the observational powers of a banana slug that $3.2 million of federal money spent on community drug and alcohol centres in the next two years does not come close to the real problem. They would be more honest if they admitted the war on drugs is over and the good guys lost. Patrick Nagle's column appears on Mondays. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D