Pubdate: Wed, 02 Nov 2005
Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC)
Copyright: 2005 Vancouver Courier
Contact:  http://www.vancourier.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474
Author: Mike Howell, staff writer
Cited: Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users http://www.vandu.org/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Downtown+Eastside
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

FACING REALITY

"If we do our work well, we should be able to eliminate the open drug 
market on the Downtown Eastside by the next election."

That ambitious statement came from Mayor Larry Campbell in his 
inauguration speech in December 2002.

The "next election" Campbell was referring to is Nov. 19, the one 
that will exclude his name on the ballot because he is retiring and 
accepted a seat in the Senate.

To gauge whether Campbell and his city councillors did their "work 
well," the Courier interviewed 30 people last month who live or work 
in the Downtown Eastside.

Twenty-eight of the respondents were emphatic that the visible 
selling and using of drugs continues in the Downtown Eastside.

In fact, the majority say the open drug market remains the same as it 
did three years ago. Some claim it's worse and simply has been pushed 
from one street to another.

"I see it every day in the alley outside my building," says Leeanne 
Barr, a web project manager who lives in an apartment at Carrall and 
Cordova streets. "There's lots of dealing going on. It never seems to 
stop. So I'm not seeing much of a change."

Barr's words were echoed by drug users, recovering alcoholics, single 
moms on welfare, information technology professionals and merchants 
in Gastown, Chinatown and along Hastings.

Those who saw a slight decrease in open drug activity are operators 
of businesses in the industrial area a few blocks east of Oppenheimer 
Park, a popular hangout for addicts.

Though half of the respondents noticed increased police patrols in 
the Downtown Eastside-and felt safer as a result-they noted the 
presence is sporadic.

The dealers, meanwhile, continue to sell heroin, cocaine and other 
drugs under the nose of a police department located less than a block 
from Main and Hastings.

"We hardly saw any [police] before, so it's gotten better that way," 
says Albert Deslauriers, owner of Save-On Meats at 43 West Hastings. 
"You could be on your way to the morgue down here, and they wouldn't 
come. That's changed, but we'd like to see more."

Respondents also weighed in on the supervised injection site, the 
federal government's heroin trials, the redevelopment of Woodward's 
and their pick to replace Campbell as mayor.

Many offered solutions to the drug problem and how to revitalize an 
area that has historically been known as the heart of the city.

The Courier did not interview police, politicians or health officials 
for this story because their comments on the Downtown Eastside are 
often heard in the media. As many residents pointed out, the 
"ordinary" citizens are the ones who must live and work in an area 
they say has long been ignored by city governments.

"We're fed up with this community being a dumping ground and nobody 
caring about us down here," says Haedy Mason, an unemployed 
43-year-old mother of three children who lives in a housing co-op on 
East Pender in Chinatown. "Is it ever going to get better? The answer 
for me is that it's not going to get better until there's political 
will to make it better."

Fifteen women and 15 men were randomly picked to participate in the interviews.

The people were white, aboriginal, black, Indo-Canadian and Chinese. 
The youngest was 26-year-old Talib Jiwani, co-owner of Shirtland 
Drycleaning at 746 Powell St., and the eldest was 74-year-old 
Deslauriers of Save-On Meats.

They talked in apartments, on the street, in caf,s and offices from 
Victory Square to the Aboriginal Mother Centre on Dundas Street.

Eighteen of the respondents say they have never had a drug or alcohol 
problem. The others are drug users, recovering addicts, recovering 
alcoholics and occasional drinkers.

Twenty were victims of crime, having been beaten, robbed or had their 
store or home broken into. Worst hit were drug users and 59-year-old 
Robert Desmoulin, who lives in aboriginal housing on West Pender.

In the past two months, he was assaulted and robbed twice, he says 
during an interview from his bed where he lays in noticeable pain. 
The first attack occurred outside his building when two men and a 
woman jumped him.

Desmoulin, who walks with a cane, had just returned from an early 
evening dinner at a McDonald's restaurant in nearby International Village.

His attackers kicked him in the head and back and stole his wallet 
and keys. He was treated in hospital for bruises and cuts.

A month ago, he was attacked again in his building's fence-protected 
courtyard. All he remembers is a couple of guys jumping over the 
fence and beating him. His bruised ribs make it difficult for him to talk.

"I found him the next day lying in a bush, moaning and groaning," 
says Koreann Tremblay, the building's manager, who listened to 
Desmoulin tell his story to the Courier. "Robert's safety is my 
number one concern right now. He's afraid to go out any more. Friends 
now come to visit him."

Heroin user Greg Liang, who lives in Chinatown, says he was badly 
beaten twice in eight years. He told his story while waiting for a 
meeting to begin at the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users (VANDU) 
office on Hastings.

"Stupid shit, you know-over dope," says Liang, who is a regular 
client of Insite, the city's supervised injection site at 139 East Hastings.

Liang was one of 20 respondents to support Insite, which opened in 
September 2003. He believes the facility, which gets an average of 
600 visits a day, has curbed the spread of disease, decreased street 
nuisance and reduced overdose deaths.

Up the street from the VANDU office, the owner of the Chinatown 
Supermarket on Keefer Street says he's still undecided about the 
effectiveness of the injection site.

"When it opened, I didn't support it 100 per cent," says Ken Lau, 
while standing at the back of his store. "It's hard to say if it's 
working because there are still addicts on the street, but I don't 
see as many in the alleys here."

Fellow merchant Edward Gutierrez, co-owner of Artistic Art and Craft 
Ltd. on East Pender, doesn't mince words about his position on the 
injection site.

"It's a bloody flop and a waste of money," he says from behind his 
desk. "It is supposed to lessen drug users from shooting up in the 
streets when the public and kids are around, but it's not doing that."

Gutierrez, however, supports the federal government's experiment to 
give government-prescribed heroin to a monitored group of heroin addicts.

The North American Opiate Medication Initiatives (NAOMI) aims to 
provide 70 addicts with heroin and 88 with heroin and methadone to 
study which group manages its addiction better.

Similar experiments tried in Switzerland and the Netherlands suggest 
prescription heroin can be an effective treatment and help some addicts.

Gutierrez was one of 18 respondents to support the trials, with six 
opposed, two undecided and four not familiar enough with the project 
to comment.

"At least [the government] is trying to do something to get people 
off drugs instead of allowing them to do it," Gutierrez says.

Another supporter was Janice Abbott, who lives at Columbia and 
Alexander streets and is the executive director of Atira Women's 
Resource Society on East Cordova.

"Folks who use heroin-if it's monitored like legal drugs-can live 
relatively normal lives," Abbott says. "We need to eliminate peoples' 
judgment to heroin use and [the trials] will hopefully reduce that."

Abbott doesn't believe law enforcement is the answer to disrupting 
the open drug market. She points to the need to reduce poverty first.

"I don't see too many women down here who grew up in healthy, happy 
homes. Women we work with have experienced a level of acute violence 
and live in poverty. These are the issues that have to be addressed."

The prevalence of crime and drugs in the Downtown Eastside has 
Gastown resident Colleen Dix wanting to move.

The 35-year-old Dix, a website manager for Telus, doesn't support the 
injection site or the heroin trials and says the money could be 
better spent on treatment for addicts.

She moved into her 500-square-foot loft on Alexander Street 19 months 
ago. She paid $188,000 for it, and bought it partly for nostalgic reasons.

"My grandmother used to take me to $1.49 days [at Woodward's], and we 
would love coming down here," she says over coffee at Starbucks on 
Water Street. "But in the last two months, it's become more apparent 
how gross it can be down here. I'm sort of tired of all the junkies 
and having to be on alert."

Her car was broken into in her building's secure parking lot, and her 
bike was stolen from a locker in her building. The increase in 
nightclubs, which have been the scene of shootings, violence and 
late-night noise, is another reason she's looking elsewhere.

"It's been an adventure, but it's time to move on," says Dix, who 
wants to start a family and move to a townhouse in Fairview Slopes or 
the West Side.

The Downtown Eastside is the start of a new beginning for Danielle 
Jackson, a 40-year-old former drug user and dealer. She opened Sacred 
Space, a "holistic and metaphysical boutique" Saturday at 27 West Pender.

The high-end 2,300-square-foot store features books, jewelry, home 
decor and a coffee bar and offers yoga classes and writing groups. 
Jackson, who grew up in the Downtown Eastside, is a certified hypnotherapist.

Her transformation from teenage dealer to business owner is 
remarkable. She left the drug trade 25 years ago after a friend was 
shot and killed, she says.

"That really scared me and I could no longer handle that life," she 
says, noting 12-step programs, counselling and friends helped her 
embark on a healthier road.

Jackson has since worked for non-profits and was a gaming manager on 
cruise ships for almost 10 years.

Last year, she settled with her husband in an apartment near Main and Terminal.

To open her store, she enrolled in business courses through a 
Downtown Eastside skills program, developed a business plan and 
secured financing through a bank. Sacred Space is located on the 
ground floor of the same building where Desmoulin was beaten twice.

"I don't only see what other people see-the drugs and stuff-and 
besides, what's going on down here is happening in other places, too. 
Just look at the West End."

Jackson was easily the most optimistic of the people interviewed by 
the Courier. Her outlook is of a street smart woman who believes a 
better community can be built if more people take pride in it.

She supports the injection site, the heroin trials and hopes the 
Woodward's redevelopment will inspire more people to open businesses 
in the Downtown Eastside.

Jackson was one of 24 respondents to support the $280 million 
Woodward's project, which will include condo units, a daycare, Simon 
Fraser University and 200 units of social housing.

"What people say down here is 200 units of housing [at Woodward's] 
isn't enough, or the injection site isn't enough. But I'm glad that 
something is being done."

Adds Jackson: "A lot of people try to run from their history, from 
where they grew up, but this is the community I love, and I want to 
stay here and make it work."

A few blocks away, Julia Manitius also has high hopes for the 
revitalization of the Downtown Eastside. Last December, she opened 
Urbanity, a high-end women's clothing store on Abbott Street in Gastown.

A Montreal native, who moved to Gastown after 28 years in Denmark, 
the 60-year-old was attracted to the historic community's buildings 
and mix of artistic people.

"I thought I could be part of creating something here, and help build 
the revitalization," says Manitius, sitting on a couch in her store. 
"I'm not going to move because of the problems in the district, and I 
would very much like my business to work out here."

Even so, the newcomer to the city is flabbergasted that politicians, 
police and city agencies have let the Downtown Eastside slide into 
such a deplorable state.

Ironically, last month, Conde Nast Traveler magazine in its readers' 
choice awards named Vancouver "Best City in the Americas" this year.

"I just can't believe that a city that's supposed to be one of the 
best places in the world... that people managing the city could allow 
this to happen."

After the Nov. 19 city election, eliminating the open drug market in 
the Downtown Eastside will no longer be Larry Campbell's problem.

When he announced in the summer that he was retiring, Campbell 
admitted "nothing was perfect in the Downtown Eastside, yet it's well 
on its way to becoming a more livable place."

The mayor pointed to the opening of the injection site and the 
redevelopment of Woodward's as evidence. He did not address why the 
open drug market continues.

"So everything that I wanted to do has been completed or is well in 
progress," he told a packed news conference outside his office at city hall.

Still, there's the deplorable conditions in the hotels in the 
Downtown Eastside, the lack of treatment centres and mental health 
facilities, dilapidated abandoned buildings, no 24-hour women's 
centre, limited social housing and spent syringes in playgrounds.

The list doesn't end there.

Deslauriers of Save-On Meats wants to know why his property taxes 
doubled to $23,000 in the last year, yet the city refuses to enforce 
its untidy premises bylaw against landlords of unsightly buildings 
that line the block.

"I had to go after the city to get the building across the street 
torn down because people were squatting in there, lighting fires and 
all kinds of stuff," he says.

Sabrina Driuna, a legal advocate for low-income residents, wants to 
know why the city allows human feces to pile up in the alleys while 
the call for public toilets has gone unanswered.

Recovering drug addict Scott Robertson, who lives in a house across 
the street from drug-infested Oppenheimer Park, wants to know why 
so-called refugees continue to sell drugs on the street.

All 30 people were asked how they would solve the drug problem. The 
question was almost always followed by a long pause before an answer came.

Managing the drug problem might be a better way to put the question, 
some say, because it will never be solved.

Some called for legalization of drugs to stop the "predatory 
dealers," others called for more injection sites, stiffer penalties 
for dealers and widespread government-prescribed heroin.

The common answer was simple in thought, but complex in 
reality-reduce poverty. Addiction and poverty are intertwined, they 
say. Decrease one to reduce the other.

Though politicians say tackling poverty and addiction involves the 
cooperation of three levels of government-as the injection site and 
the recently renovated Silver-Avalon Hotel show-those interviewed say 
leadership has to come first from the mayor and council.

On the same day Campbell announced his retirement, he endorsed his 
friend Jim Green to run for mayor. He's running under the Vision 
Vancouver banner against Sam Sullivan of the NPA.

Green, a Strathcona resident, is a longtime champion of the Downtown 
Eastside and even has a housing project named after him on Alexander Street.

Green wants more police and supports opening a second injection site. 
He has been behind the Woodward's project for years, looking to it as 
a beacon in the revitalization of the Downtown Eastside.

Sullivan, a Yaletown resident, supports a wider circulation of 
government-prescribed heroin to keep addicts from committing crimes 
to feed their habit.

The 12-year city councillor has given money to a drug addict and a 
prostitute to buy drugs and claims to be the first politician in 
Canada to ask for harm reduction.

Downtown Eastsiders say they've heard all kinds of promises from 
politicians, only to be disappointed later. As Robertson watches two 
men in Oppenheimer Park huddle under an umbrella to light a crack 
pipe, he has this to say: "There's too much tolerance to the bullshit 
that goes on down here. How far are we willing to let this 
neighbourhood go to hell?"

The rhetoric of the political campaigns continues for two weeks. The 
majority of respondents to the Courier are still undecided on their 
choice for mayor.

Whether it be Green or Sullivan, one of them will make an 
inauguration speech in December. And you can bet a lot more than 30 
people in the Downtown Eastside will be listening, if not smirking at 
what comes out of the new mayor's mouth. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake