Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jul 2008 Source: Richmond News (CN BC) Copyright: 2008, Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.richmond-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1244 Author: Tracy Sherlock Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) WOMEN NEED TURNING POINT Now that Turning Point has withdrawn their plans for a controversial 32-bed recovery house, I suggest Richmond citizens get behind the society's plans to build a 10-bed home for women in recovery. Although there is a 130-person wait list for addictions housing or recovery beds, and a 10- to 12-week wait list for Turning Point's men's facility, there is no facility with a wait list for women in our city. This is not because there are no women seeking treatment -- au contraire -- but because there are zero beds in Richmond for women in recovery. "Women who require treatment who live in Richmond have few options. They either go to Vancouver or Abbotsford or out of province; because there are so few options, many women don't end up getting the treatment they need," Plant said. Their children are often left with family or relatives, or placed in foster care. "The challenge of finding appropriate child care often precludes many women from getting the help they need," Plant said. Although women report drug use less often than men, women have a greater vulnerability to the physical health impacts of substance abuse, which makes girls and women more vulnerable to addiction, according to a report, Girls, Women and Substance Use, prepared by the British Columbia Centre of Excellence for Women's Health. Women's drug use tends to be related to mood, confidence, stress and weight control, and these emotional connections can keep women in a destructive cycle, the same report says. Further, it says that sexual abuse and physical abuse, which are experienced more often by girls than by boys, are strongly related to problems with substance abuse. Turning Point might still proceed with plans to build a women's recovery centre at the Ash Street site, or elsewhere in the city. "For families in Richmond recovering from an addiction, the options are severely limited. Unless there is a local solution, we as a community risk breaking up families, turning our backs on at-risk children and abandoning members of our community," Touchstone Family Association's executive director Michael McCoy wrote earlier this year in support of Turning Point's proposal. If Turning Point does open a home for women, those who enter their program can expect a high chance of staying clean. "Turning Point works. On average, approximately 75 per cent of our clients remain drug and alcohol free one year after completing our program," Plant said. "Turning Point intends to pursue our goal of meeting the need for affordable addictions housing within the community. We will work with B.C. Housing to find property that would be appropriate. Beyond that I cannot speculate at this time." I, for one, hope that Turning Point strongly pursues their plans for a women's recovery centre. A letter from one opponent who wrote the News last year said, "If you were in our shoes, moms of the young kids, would you allow them to walk on the streets and play at the playgrounds alone as they used to do near the proposed area? If this rezoning plan is a go, our innocent kids will be vulnerable to drug/alcohol temptation, exposed to unknown risks, and fall into "victims" by developing horror and even psychological illness." What if the addicted person is a mom herself? That certainly should change the scary stereotype of a drug addict corrupting the neighbourhood. The addict could be the mom hosting the neighbourhood birthday party, or the mom in charge of driving your child on a field trip. Wouldn't you want them to have the support they need to recover? And certainly, being raised by a mom in recovery, in a supportive housing environment, holds a heck of a lot more promise for a successful future than being placed in foster care while mom goes into recovery on the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver. Have a heart, Caring Citizens. Remember that women face addiction too. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom