Pubdate: Mon, 06 Jan 2014
Source: Vancouver 24hours (CN BC)
Copyright: 2014 Canoe Inc
Contact:  http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3837
Author: Laila Yuile

The Duel

Columnists Laila Yuile and Brent Stafford battle over the issues of
the day. The winner of the last duel on pipelines was Laila with 52%.

This week's topic:

Should civil liberties be suspended for violent and mentally ill
chronic drug users?

MORE RESOURCES A BETTER IDEA

While Brent makes a couple of good points in his column this week, I'm
sure glad he isn't in charge of public safety in our province.

To make an assumption that the perpetrator behind the tragic death of
Julie Paskall was an agitated, mentally ill hard drug user, and to use
that assumption to bolster the debate, is tragic in itself. Yes,
enough is enough, but let the investigation play out without putting
something out there that we don't know is fact or fiction.

If solving the problem of violent and mentally ill chronic drug users
was as easy as rounding them all up, and shipping them to a facility
in the middle of nowhere, it would have been done long ago. Quite
frankly, it's not that easy and it's not the right thing to do. Mental
illness and drug addiction are two totally separate issues. While they
often co-exist, they must be treated separately and
differently.

Individuals with more severe forms of mental illness, such as
schizophrenia, can lead full and productive lives when accurately
diagnosed and followed by a professional to ensure medications are
taken as required, if needed. Unfortunately, funding cutbacks over the
years have resulted in the inability to follow up on those individuals
who are marginalized. They end up on the streets, often using drugs
and becoming repeat offenders.

Then there's the other scenario. A perfectly healthy individual with
no prior mental illness begins taking something like crystal meth,
which as Brent points out, can cause severe paranoia and psychosis.

Here is the problem. We take all these people off the streets, ship
them up to a work camp and get them clean - what happens then? They
get released back into the community, where there is a known lack of
resources to follow marginal individuals with mental illness to ensure
they take the medication that helps keep them on track. And the cycle
begins again. Mental institutions have been closed, funding has been
cut and probation officers, social workers and mental health workers
are overloaded because of it. It just doesn't work.

Sometimes it feels like criminals have more rights than victims. The
laws of our country govern each of us and civil liberties are part of
our social fabric. There are no easy answers, but rounding up mentally
ill and addicted people off the street isn't the way to provide public
safety - unless you live in the dark ages.

Laila Yuile is an independent writer, blogger and political
commentator. You can read her blog at www.lailayuile.com . 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D