Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jan 2017
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2017 Times Colonist
Contact:  http://www.timescolonist.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481
Author: Don Evans
Page: A13

EVERY LIFE SAVED IS AN OPPORTUNITY FOR CHANGE

Drug-overdose prevention site is making a difference in first weeks of
operation

I attended a memorial service at Our Place recently for a man I had
come to know for far too brief a time.

The outpouring of love, affection and sadness over his passing would
come as a surprise only to those who didn't know him. Because, while
he was part of the family at Our Place, to the outside world, he was
labelled something far different.

Having lived on the streets, this imposing but gentle man wore his
share of demons, the deadliest of which is addiction.

He died too young, and sadly, he's not alone.

There is a drug-overdose crisis in our community that is claiming far
too many lives, and its impact rains down like hammer blows.

Death is contagious, for it follows sorrow and pain as loyally as a
dog follows its master. Most of the people who suffer from addiction
use drugs to mask a litany of trauma and abuse in their lives. When
that trauma is compounded by the loss of a friend or loved one, it
becomes easier to be more reckless with their own lives.

With training, skill and compassion, our staff is saving lives every
day. This isn't the job they originally envisioned for themselves, but
this is the reality we face due to the arrival of fentanyl, a drug
that is 100 times stronger than morphine. Not only have our staff
members become first-responders, but they are responding to people in
distress with whom they often have a close relationship.

It is heartbreaking to lose a member of your family, and at Our Place,
everyone is family.

This year, we pledge to fight back. We can't stand by and watch people
die - that's simply not who we are. Working in co-operation with
Island Health, our first step was to open an overdose-prevention site
in the courtyard of our facility at 919 Pandora Ave.

In its first few weeks of operation, the converted cargo container is
already making a difference. With a full-time paramedic on site, we
can respond to an opioid overdose immediately and save that person's
life. But beyond this essential medical service, we are also
experiencing more open dialogue with a population that tends to shut
itself away from our community's angry glare, from the people who look
at addiction as criminal, rather than a health issue.

Our Place isn't blameless in this either. In order to maintain a
sanctuary for all people experiencing homelessness, we don't allow
drug use inside our facility. This means that people caught injecting
drugs in our washrooms are asked to leave the premises. Repeat
offences can also lead to a ban.

Unfortunately, this policy shifts the problem to the streets and the
parks, to the doorways and parking lots.

It also means that when people need help with their addiction, Our
Place isn't always seen as a place they can turn to.

But our temporary overdose prevention site is changing that. We still
don't allow drug use inside our building, but by opening a place of
dignity in response to this overdose crisis, our outreach workers are
having meaningful dialogue with this incredibly vulnerable and
stigmatized population.

I wish I could tell you that the work we are doing is a perfect answer
to addiction, but it's not. It's an emergency response to a health
crisis. The burden of real and substantive change needs to rest on
broader shoulders than a local charity.

However, every discussion and every life saved from overdose is
another opportunity for change, another chance to offer a helping hand
and transform a life.

If we simply turned our backs, what would that say about
us?

I want to thank every one of you for your prayers and support as Our
Place continues its task of keeping people safe and offering a
sanctuary free of judgment and scorn.

We couldn't be the welcoming place we strive to be without you.

Don Evans is executive director of Our Place Society.
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MAP posted-by: Matt