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HARM REDUCTION 'A DECEPTION TO THE PUBLIC'
Harm reduction is nothing more than smoke and mirrors, the director of a
Christian-based treatment agency told Abbotsford City Council at a Monday
night public hearing. On the other hand, the medical community said harm
reduction is scientifically supported and an integral part in reducing
disease and protecting health.
Addicts, counsellors, a doctor and residents took turns at the mike to
speak passionately about harm reduction, as the city plans to amend a
zoning bylaw to ban future harm reduction programs and facilities that
offer services to addicts.
Opinions could not have been more polarized.
"[Harm reduction] is a deception to the public. These methods are a bunch
of smoke and mirrors" and don't have studies to back them, said Brian
Pierson, the Langley director of Teen Challenge, a Christian-based
treatment network that requires clients to abstain from prescribed methadone.
"This is a community of morality and integrity. When you bring this in it
leads to community deterioration. Talk about property values dropping,"
Pierson said as he urged the council to make the amendment.
Banned facilities would include "needle exchanges, safe-injection sites,
mobile dispensing vans, methadone treatment facilities and other types or
similar uses," reads the amendment. An earlier reference to medical
marijuana production and compassion clubs was dropped.
Public health officer Dr. Andrew Larder said the Fraser Health Authority
has a harm reduction policy and supports such programs as "interventions of
scientifically proven effectiveness."
The bylaw change could potentially impede delivery of a continuum of
services designed to prevent disease and drive Abbotsford residents to go
elsewhere for help, he said.
"It would be detrimental to the individuals affected and the community as a
whole," he said.
Abbotsford residents already go to Fraser Valley Connection Services, a
needle exchange in Chilliwack, said the agency's director, Sam Mohan.
"We have 1,400 registered clients and we're taking care of your sex trade
workers - you need to take of them. You're going to kill too many people,"
she said.
Mohan said discarded needles are not a problem in Chilliwack, but she had a
call from an Abbotsford city worker asking her what to do with the 3,200
needles they've found in parks and schools around the city.
"I said go drop them on Mayor Mary Reeves' desk," said Mohan.
Others charged the council to "bring God back into society."
Helmut Boehm, executive director of Wagner Hills, said his Christian-based
treatment centre in Glen Valley no longer qualified for government grants
after 2001 when it refused to accept clients on methadone.
"We felt it would be hypocritical to give people substances. We are on a
mission to set them free, as Jesus directed us to," said Boehm.
However, Sean Spear, executive director of Impact, a youth outpatient
treatment program funded by FHA, pleaded for the council to have an open
mind, as "harm reduction practices and abstinence are part of the same
treatment of continuum of care."
Spear said he's been "on both sides of the needle exchange counter, as a
consumer and as a worker. I believe that I would not have lived . . . had
it not been for the harm reduction interventions that saved my life."
Such services are first contact sites where addicts can get access to detox
and treatment. Banning them would lead an increase in overdose deaths and
HIV and hepatitis C rates, and further marginalize and demonize users in
the community, he said.
Linda Noble, a member of the Abbotsford child and youth committee,
suggested that council members get a clarification of the definition of
harm reduction. She said that Abbotsford police, ICBC, public health, the
Ministry of Children and Families and many other agencies have harm
reduction "as a philosophical underpinning."
Mayor Mary Reeves said she and the council will consider the comments and
may have a decision on May 30. As for meeting with the Fraser Health
Authority, the council cannot receive new information after a public
hearing is held.
"The public hearing is the last opportunity to speak on the topic," she
said Wednesday.
