Pubdate: Sun, 24 Nov 2002 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Jon Ferry, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) PLAN FOR SAFE-INJECTION SITES IS ALL FULL OF HOLES Voters are usually very smart people. But, I think those who voted for Larry Campbell as Vancouver mayor because of his magic drug plan for the Downtown Eastside are being very gullible. The plan, featuring the immediate introduction of a "safe-injection site" into the notorious drug ghetto, has more holes in it than Ottawa's implementation strategy for the Kyoto accord. It's full of greenhouse gas. Don't just ask Alliance MP Randy White and U.S. drug czar John Walters, who have warned that the site will simply attract more drug addicts to this den of iniquity, centre of the welfare-fed junkie industry. Ask Mary Reeves, the aptly named mayor-elect of Abbotsford. The 52-year-old grandmom scored a far bigger upset on election night than mayor-elect Campbell. After all, she had to beat out George Ferguson, who had been in the mayor's chair for 31 years. Reeves is the first to admit that Abbotsford, a mushrooming city of 120,000 with more than its fair share of prisons, is infested with downtown drug dealers. But she's taking a radically different approach to the problem than Campbell and his give-them-the-poison gang from COPE/NDP. For one thing, she opposes the safe-injection sites (rejected by Stockholm and other major European cities) and other "harm-reduction" methods at a time when government is cutting back on drug prevention, treatment and law enforcement. For another, she think it's a huge mistake to concentrate services for drug addicts in one area, as is the case in Vancouver. "How are we helping these people by creating a ghetto for them?" Reeves asks. "Aren't we actually marginalizing them more by saying, 'We believe in helping you, but we're going to just put you into this one area because we don't want you anywhere else?'" And this refreshing view is what got her into trouble this spring as manager of the Abbotsford Downtown Business Association. Reeves opposed plans by the Salvation Army to put a homeless shelter alongside a "bridge" home for recovering addicts. She said that having recovering addicts near active users was like putting snakes into a snake pit, where they multiply. That set off the politically correct crowd, and a handful of demonstrators paraded around outside the ADBA office. But single-mom Reeves didn't back down. "Our downtown is riddled with drug dealers right now," she said. "So why would you want to put somebody who is trying to recover in the middle of that?" Reeves figures people are always looking for easy solutions: "And when it comes to addiction, there is no easy solution." There is a solution, however, even though it isn't currently politically fashionable. And that is to get the addicts to kick their habits by simply giving them up. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager