Pubdate: Sun, 03 Dec 2006
Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC)
Copyright: 2006 Surrey Leader
Contact:  http://www.surreyleader.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236
Author: Jeff Nagel

RURAL ADDICT RECOVERY CENTRE?

Momentum is building behind the idea of creating a dedicated 
community run for and by recovering drug addicts that would be 
located outside Greater Vancouver.

And the Greater Vancouver Regional District board suggests the addict 
enclave might be located on the Ashcroft Ranch land it already owns 
that may also be home to a new regional landfill.

The concept is to try a new avenue of fighting addiction by following 
the model of San Patrignano, Italy.

That intentional therapeutic community - formed from donated land and 
financed through the sale of goods inmates make, private donations 
and public grants - is credited with achieving a 70 per cent success 
rate in healing drug addicts and returning them to productive society.

One of the figures behind the local push is Liberal MLA Lorne 
Mayencourt (Vancouver-Burrard), who toured the Italian community and 
wants to find a site that could house B.C. addicts.

"We have to find something that's away from the centre of their drug 
life," Mayencourt told GVRD directors last Friday.

"I'm not suggesting we abandon the Four Pillars approach," he said. 
"I'm suggesting we add to it."

He said addicts voluntarily commit to live within the walls of San 
Patrignano for three to five years, which they spend learning skills 
away from the usual sources of temptation.

Instead of abusing, he said, they heal together and become productive 
citizens, working in San Patrignano's winery, dairy, furniture 
factory and other enterprises that have become renowned for quality.

Every one of the 2,200 people there is a recovering addict, he said.

The region's politicians have mixed views on the idea.

But GVRD directors voted to ask the province to study the concept and 
consider the Ashcroft Ranch as a potential site.

Whether garbage goes there is up in the air - the GVRD is studying 
alternatives on orders from Victoria after sinking $10 million into 
the Ashcroft plan - but even if the dump is built there, the property is roomy.

The landfill would occupy less than five per cent of the 
4,200-hectare historic ranch.

"We have the land - why not use it?" asked Pitt Meadows Mayor Don 
MacLean. "It is remote enough. It gets people away from where they 
live and where the problem was caused in the first place."

Richmond Coun. Harold Steves said addicts could farm and ranch and 
ride horses there, calling it potentially good therapy.

To others it smacks of an attempt to clean up Vancouver streets by 
sequestering addicts away in the countryside.

"This is a new form of institutionalization," charged Coquitlam Mayor 
Maxine Wilson. "I think this is a dangerous approach to take."

Others said it has merit despite the optics.

"For many people segregation is exactly what they need," said Maple 
Ridge Coun. Judy Dueck.

Mayencourt said he'd "love to" have such a community set up in an 
urban area, but no municipality would agree to host it.

"Communities are pretty negative about it," he said.

A rural part of the Fraser Valley has also been suggested as a 
possible home, and other directors said the province should also look 
at one of B.C.'s abandoned company ghost towns.

Hunt Supports Using Italian Approach

A Surrey councillor who helped instigate the push for an Italian 
model drug recovery community says he likes the idea of the Ashcroft 
Ranch being used.

Marvin Hunt, who also chairs the GVRD's waste management committee, 
said he sees no optics problems with the region's new landfill 
possibly also going to the same site.

GVRD staff have researched the recovery model of San Patrignano on 
the recommendation of Hunt, who toured the Italian community three years ago.

Fans see it as new hope for escape from addiction.

"It's absolutely awesome," Hunt said of the Italian community.

San Patrignano started in 1978 when a wealthy benefactor opened his 
thoroughbred horse farm to addicts and volunteers.

It's now got a vineyard, printing presses, various factories and a 
hospital for AIDS treatment.

Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts calls the San Patrignano model "excellent" 
but said she doesn't like the appearance of putting it near the 
regional dump site.

"I would probably think long and hard about that," she said. "I don't 
know if that's the best place for it."
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MAP posted-by: Elaine