Pubdate: Wed, 05 Jul 2006
Source: Province, The (CN BC)
Copyright: 2006 The Province
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/theprovince/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476
Author: John Bermingham
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

EAST-SIDERS LOBBY TO KEEP INJECTION SITE

Health Authority, Community Ask For Extension

A last-minute push is on to keep the safe-injection site open.

Two months before the Downtown Eastside facility is slated to close, 
the lobbying effort has heated up to get a federal government extension.

The Insite program is due to wind up its three-year run on Sept. 12, 
and needs a special Health Canada exemption to continue.

The pilot study was the first in North America to allow drug-users to 
inject drugs with the blessing of government.

The operator, Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, has asked for a 3 
1/2-year extension.

The Portland Hotel Society, which operates non-medical services at 
the facility, has launched a letter campaign aimed at Prime Minister 
Stephen Harper and Health Minister Tony Clement.

PHS collected letters yesterday from Downtown Eastside residents at 
Main and Hastings asking Ottawa to keep the facility open.

It's also forwarding all the scientific research on the site to the 
decision-makers' desks.

"My view is that they would be insane not to make it go ahead, and 
that they will let it go ahead," said PHS head Mark Townsend.

"We don't want to be in a position where we didn't do anything and it 
didn't go ahead because people didn't get the information they need 
to do the right thing."

Mayor Sam Sullivan said he's been lobbying Tory ministers to keep the 
site open, and wants to expand the program.

"They shouldn't assume there's widespread desire to shut down the 
safe-injection site," said Sullivan.

"In fact, the support for the safe-injection site comes from 
surprising quarters."

Support is strong from the Chinatown business community, he said, 
who've seen a decline in street disorder.

Sullivan also recently met with Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe, who wants a 
safe-injection site there.

Ann Livingstone of drug-user group VANDU said she's optimistic the 
facility will stay open.

"If you're mean to drug users in this neighbourhood, you'll really 
look stupid," she said. "We know it's working."

Livingstone figures there's a need for three sites around the 
Downtown Eastside, where drug users inject themselves for a total of 
15,000 times a day.

"It's really hard to lobby when they say yes," she added. "If they 
want to have an all-out war on harm reduction, I think in the end, 
we'll end up with more than we've got now."

During an election stop in Vancouver last December, Stephen Harper 
said there would be no more tax dollars "to fund drug use" and, in 
May, said he's not committed to it until it's evaluated.

At the end of March, 7,278 people were registered at Insite, 
injecting heroin and cocaine at the rate of 600 visits per day.

There were 450 overdoses, but no deaths. About 1,600 people were 
referred to addiction counselling.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman