Sunday, September 21, 2008

Adios...for a day or two

On Monday morning, I will be heading into the woods for a few days.

I'll be reading....books! Remember those?

The news will have to survive without my take.

See you all on Thursday morning.

Wallace Craig exposes the Meddling


"Set in a sterile and disused pre-trial jail behind the Criminal Court at 222 Main Street, the DCC will be a revolving-door court for drug addicts, a finger-in-the-dyke experiment that lacks the critical support of detoxification and residential treatment premises."

This is the second paragraph is what is perhaps Justice Wallace Craig's best piece ever in the North Shore News.

Read it and understand that the community court is a good idea, amateurishly executed.

Joyful Noise

Pop the Corks!


"Celebrate?"

What are you doing today to celebrate Insite's fifth anniversary?

Take a junkie to brunch.

Break into a Lexus.

Drag a political candidate screaming through the DTES back alleys.

Light up with Elizabeth May.

SEx, Lies & Injection Sites



HERE IS RAW POLITICS.

TOTAL SPIN AND FABRICATIONS.

WHAT IS WORSE IS THAT

ITS AUTHORS ACTUALLY

BELIEVE WHAT THEY ARE SAYING.

THE TRUTH IS THAT

THERE IS NOTHING ABOUT THIS

DISASTER THAT "WORKS."

AND DEMONIZING THE PRIME MINISTER WON'T CHANGE THAT.



Vancouver's supervised injection site celebrates fifth anniversary

Cheryl Chan The Province

Sunday, September 21, 2008

When Insite, North America's first supervised drug-injection site marks its fifth anniversary in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside Sunday, the celebration will be tempered with disappointment.

Despite research that shows Insite works, the federal government has refused to support it, say members of PHS Community Services, which runs the facility along with Vancouver Coastal Health.

"Old arguments against Insite just don't stand up against real research," executive director Liz Evans told The Province. "It's time to accept that supervised-injection sites are a necessary part of the comprehensive plan needed to seriously address drug addiction." "It's time for Stephen Harper to listen to the evidence and put public health before politics," said Mark Townsend, Evans' partner and a fellow PHS executive.

Insite has been the subject of more than 30 peer-reviewed studies and several government-commissioned reports that show it has a positive impact in the community, has taken more than a million injections off city streets, has intervened in more than 850 overdoses, has reduced transmission of HIV and hepatitis C and does not attract new drug users. Townsend said it is "disappointing" to be constantly fighting the battle against Ottawa, despite support from the municipal and provincial governments and nearly 80 per cent of doctors in the Canadian Medical Association. "The sad part of it is, there's lots more to do," said Townsend. "We've opened detox beds, we're trying to establish therapeutic [services] with horse therapy. We run a dental clinic and a medical clinic, but our time gets sucked up trying to keep [Insite] on the table." In addition to Insite, PHS Community Services also operates Onsite's 12 detox beds, several transitional beds for patients waiting to get into a long-term treatment facility and a raft of other services in the Downtown Eastside. PHS has assets of $12 million and revenues of almost $11 million a year. Insite, which sees about 600 to 1,100 users daily, has operated in the Downtown Eastside since 2003 under an exemption from the federal Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. The permit had already been extended twice when in May, the B.C. Supreme Court granted it a constitutional exemption. The federal government is appealing the decision, with the case scheduled to be heard in April 2009. Meanwhile, federal candidates on the campaign trail have offered words of support. The Liberals have promised to renew Insite's federal licence as part of their made-in-B.C. platform. Green Party leader Elizabeth May has also pledged support. Townsend said it shouldn't matter who is in power. "We don't see it as a political issue," he said. "No matter who's in power, you need to know a health issue like this isn't politically interfered with." Invited speakers at tomorrow's news conference include Dr. Julio Montaner, president of the International AIDS Society, and Prof. Neil Boyd of Simon Fraser University.

Journals from the Past


I don't know what I did to deserve this largess.

I must have renewed my telephone or cable subscription. Something.

Now I am receiving in the mail each week Maclean's magazine.

I can understand a document like this in 1957.

But today?

It is chocker-block full of earnest good work.

And utterly unreadable.

I think this "gift" has a finite time line. I expect it to move on to one of my unsuspecting neighbours in a few weeks.

Oy Vey!