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Pubdate: Wed, 02 Feb 2005 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Allen Garr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) WHEELS FALL OFF MEDIA STRATEGY Heroin and methadone are not the only addictive substances organizers of the NAOMI trial hope to control at Abbott and Hastings. There are also the information about the program and access to the experts. Those can be as enticing to a journalist as a junkie's fix. But even before the doors have opened the attempt to control that information has gone seriously off the rails. NAOMI stands for North American Opiate Medication Initiative. It is nothing if not controversial. For one year selected junkies will go to a government supervised site and get either free heroin or free methadone. For the first time in this hemisphere scientists will observe, among other things, what impact this steady, reliable, free supply of drugs has on the individual drug user's life. Originally three American cities were going to join the project with Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver. Not surprisingly, given the U.S. administration's paranoia about drugs, the Americans dropped out early on. Canadians are still players but between the federal funders being jumpy and Health Canada being excessively cautious in issuing the permit to distribute free heroin, the start date has been delayed repeatedly. Just before Christmas, anticipating a date was near, the NAOMI people offered a number of news outlets a controlled "exclusive" rollout of information on the project. This type of media strategy is not new. Sources frequently want to manipulate the release of information through the media, whether it is the details of the RAV line, or a new poll. Journalists thrive on information, particularly if it is new and especially if they alone receive it. Under former premier Glen Clark the NDP's preferred spot for making major announcements was at the top of the BCTV supper hour news. The TV show would get the cabinet minister and his breathless prose while other news outlets would get faxed press releases moments before air time. The cops are notorious for this tactic. The squad in charge of biker gangs in B.C. wants to make a splash about its work, maybe in advance of a budget request, so it dumps a truckload of files about the Hell's Angels on a reporter's desk at the Vancouver Sun and offers exclusive interviews with undercover cops. It works like a damn. NAOMI spin doctor Jim Boothroyd said he "sought out media of authority" to give his story to, promising selected journalists access to the site, the members of the research team, community advisory groups and a handy dandy video of the operation. Deals were made with Saturday Night, the Economist, and the Globe and Mail, which agreed to publish a piece inside its Focus section on the Saturday before the site opened. The Vancouver Sun was also offered a deal which allowed it to publish the same day as the Globe if its story was substantially different. But things came apart for Boothroyd when the Sun said it couldn't withhold the story from its CanWest sister, the National Post, the Globe's direct competitor. Boothroyd decided to stick with the Globe. That was last Wednesday. The Sun went ahead without Boothroyd's help. In fact, he tried to stop people from talking with the Sun, but the Sun moved too quickly for him except for the medical leaders in the trial who, the Sun reported, in its story Friday, "declined to be interviewed for this story because of a dispute with the Vancouver Sun about publication conditions." The Globe, realizing the Sun was about to publish, told Boothroyd the deal was off and published a story Monday. Health Canada has yet to finally approve the project. But with luck NAOMI will eventually get going and work better than the media strategy designed to welcome its birth. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth