Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jul 1999 Source: Ottawa Citizen (Canada) Copyright: 1999 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ Author: Sarah Lambert OTTAWA HANDS OUT MONEY FOR ADDICTS TORONTO - The lion's share of a federal grant to treat people with drug addictions will go to Ontario - the province that will soon force welfare recipients into rehab. Ontario will receive $8.6 million to be spent over two years on substance abuse programs in the province, federal Health Minister Allan Rock announced Wednesday. It's part of a $15.5-million annual commitment from the federal government to help Canadians overcome their drug and alcohol dependencies. In Ontario, the announcement is timely in light of a controversial promise in the Tories' campaign platform that saw the party return to power during last spring's election. Premier Mike Harris said welfare recipients judged to have addictions to drugs or alcohol would be forced to take treatment or lose their benefits. Rock distanced himself from the proposal Wednesday, refusing to say definitively whether it was something Ottawa supports. The federal government wants to ensure treatment for anyone who seeks help, he said. "I think it's important to have services available for people who want them," said Rock. "It's important for both the federal and provincial governments to work together for that purpose." An aide to Elizabeth Witmer, Ontario's health minister, said Ottawa should prove it is committed to treating addictions by restoring health transfers to the provinces. "If the federal government was serious about improving alcohol and drug treatment, they would continue to restore the over $2 billion they've cut in heath and social transfers to Ontario since 1995," said Barry Wilson. Ontario currently spends $95 million a year on substance abuse programs with funding split among 160 agencies across Ontario, Wilson added. Harris has acknowledged it will have to spend more once it expands treatment to include all addicts on welfare. Rock conceded that Ottawa's contribution may do little to help meet the demand. "We'd always like to be able to do more and there's no doubt the need is great," Rock told a news conference at Breaking the Cycle, a Toronto treatment centre. "I don't pretend that (the $8.6 million grant) is going to solve the problem, but I do say it's going to help." Ontario's forced treatment proposal is being debated even among front-line workers. Some experts say it doesn't work while others tout its success. Beverley Koven, who helps run Breaking the Cycle, says mandatory treatment may initially have the benefit of reaching more people. "I just don't know enough to be able to say whether that's the best approach or not," she said. "I know that this does work." Koven said the province should concern itself not just with welfare recipients who need help, but also the homeless, whom she's unable to help because of lack of funds. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea