Pubdate: Fri, 06 Nov 2009 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Lora Grindlay, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) 'IT'S NOT A SCARY PLACE. IT'S NOT A DANGEROUS PLACE.' Cure for Downtown Eastside involves more supported housing and decriminalization, says author The troubled but resilient Downtown Eastside neighbourhood is the subject of a new book. Titled A Thousand Dreams: Vancouver's Downtown Eastside and the Fight for its Future, the book was written by Senator Larry Campbell (a former RCMP officer, chief coroner and Vancouver mayor), Simon Fraser University criminologist Neil Boyd and the Vancouver Sun's Lori Culbert. The 352-page book offers a history of the Downtown Eastside, once the glamorous centre of Vancouver's nightlife, to today, when crime, homelessness and the combination of mental illness and drug addiction are thickly woven into the fabric of the neighbourhood. Boyd said he not only wanted to point out where policy has failed the people of the Downtown Eastside and what can be done about it, he also wanted to celebrate the area for its humanity. "The people there really do care about each other," said Boyd. "It's not a scary place. It's not a dangerous place. It might be a depressing place at times, but it's not a forbidding place. It's not like some parts of American cities where you couldn't walk safely." Boyd spoke to The Province about what's involved in a fix for the neighbourhood. Here are some of his comments: Homelessness "There needs to be a lot more supportive housing built. Not only in the Downtown Eastside but in many different places across the country . . . You have to build resources to support people who have a lot of challenges. "Regardless of where this kind of housing goes, it's important that it be built and that people not just die on the streets or that we continue to not provide adequately for people." Boyd said homelessness spiked in the 1990s due to two things happening at about the same time -- the deinstitutionalization of Riverview Hospital patients into communities without adequate support, and the federal government's abrupt halt on building social housing in 1993. Drugs Addicts should not be treated as criminals, Boyd said. "It's a move going away from treating drug use as a moral issue to treating it as a public-health issue," he said. "We could have heroin maintenance or opiate maintenance for some people, through prescription. You can handle that in a lot of different ways where people have to go and use the drugs in a facility so there is no leakage out onto the streets." "[The supervised injection site] InSite is a part of that, but also you might have opiate maintenance or heroin maintenance so people could go and get these drugs and not commit crime and not engage in prostitution in order to obtain the drugs. "I think it makes good sense to try to stop the distribution of crack. It's a very destructive drug. Policing is an important part of the picture." Decriminalization "I think we could safely legalize cannabis and regulate it in much the same way we do tobacco and alcohol. We've handed the whole business of marijuana distribution to drug dealers and in some circumstances they are thugs. With heroin, I think you can use maintenance as an option basically to control the crime connected to it. A big part of this, too, is prostitution and . . . recognizing that one of the reasons women engage in street-level prostitution is because they are very drug-addicted. If they could have those drug needs met, they are not going to expose themselves to those kinds of dangers." Crime "A lot of the crime flows with drug use. People are committing crime in order to obtain the drugs. [We should] provide them with the drugs in a relatively safe and secure manner -- and not everybody would fall into this category -- and make drugs less expensive, not more. When you prohibit things it tends to make that commodity, if it is desired by people, more expensive." Mental illness In the book, Larry Campbell says a case can be made for reopening Riverview Hospital to get hundreds of people off the street and into care. He says: "When I was a Mountie if someone was mentally ill you arrested them and took them to the hospital for assessment, then drove straight to Riverview. I think there's still a need for a place like that, for the people who are causing the most severe disorder." Civil rights are an issue, Campbell says, "but as a society we should be able to pick up people beyond help and take them to a safe place. If that safe place is Riverview, so be it." Campbell conceded only those willing to accept the help could be helped and that "forced institutionalization will never work." Prostitution Both Boyd and Campbell say the sex trade should be decriminalized and red-light districts created to ensure the safety of workers. In the book, Boyd says prostitutes are often desperate women selling their bodies to feed a drug habit. How did we arrive at the current crisis? "I think over the last 25 years or so we have become a much less compassionate society," Boyd told The Province. "Governments have been focused on deficit-cutting, budget-cutting and we know from StatsCanada that the rich have gotten richer and the poor have gotten poorer. "A couple big mistakes have been made and the big mistakes have been deinstitutionalization without adequate resources and not keeping up with the demand that deinstitutionalization created for supports. Crack cocaine is something that has been dropped upon us and is a more destructive drug than heroin, which it has replaced. That's a function of the market; it's no one's fault. You want to figure out why it is people are engaging in behaviours that are so self-destructive." Who needs to hear your proposed solutions? "I think federal politicians are the ones who have the most power to act and the greatest resources. I would hope that they would hear some of this and get involved in trying to reach out and help people who need this help and to provide more targeted, more focused resources." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D