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Gerry Bellett
Vancouver sun

Thousands of Downtown Eastside residents have problems that aren't being dealt with, Police Chief Jim Chu says.
CREDIT: Bill Keay, Vancouver Sun files
Thousands of Downtown Eastside residents have problems that aren't being dealt with, Police Chief Jim Chu says.

Vancouver Police Chief Jim Chu is calling on the federal and provincial governments to create an agency to deal exclusively with the unmanageable social problems that afflict thousands of people living in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside (DTES).

Chu says the agency should be under the control of a "director for the most vulnerable," a civil servant with the type of power given to heads of Crown corporations and agencies.

It would be the director's job to oversee all the government programs that now found in the area and hold the agencies that deliver them accountable for producing measurable results.

The recommendation is contained in the 59-page document Project Lockstep, a united effort to save lives in the Downtown Eastside, to be released today.

Chu also called for the VPD to move back to the Downtown Eastside to aid in the area's rehabilitation.

The report argues that while there have been major efforts to improve the state of affairs in the Downtown Eastside, they have failed. It says "deliberate and unintended policies and changes have played significant roles in the continuation and, or, worsening of the problems that are concentrated in the area."


Ryan Larkin - posthumous 'Spare Change' a final tribute

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New short film features work by renowned animator Ryan Larkin

MONTREAL -- Laurie Gordon had originally wanted acclaimed National Film Board animator Ryan Larkin to contribute a few drawings to the music video for her rock band Chiwawa.

What she ended up with was a good friend and a six-minute film that showcases some of the last work by Larkin, who died of lung cancer last year.

"Spare Change" will screen in Vancouver, Toronto, Quebec City and Sherbrooke, Que., on Friday and also open the Focus section on Sunday at Montreal's Festival du Nouveau Cinema.

The film, which was completed by Gordon and a team of young animators after Larkin's death, is a poetic - and surreal - trip through Larkin's imagination.

"I think he would have hoped it would have been his first in a new series," Gordon said wistfully over coffee at Larkin's favourite bar, sitting next to his regular chair.

The drawings, which range from beautiful charcoal renderings to the cartoonish, tell the story of Astral Pan, a panhandler who takes the viewer from the wintry streets of Montreal to hell and back and up to the gates of heaven, where there's a meeting with St. Peter.

Chiwawa's song "Do It For Me" is featured in the movie.

Larkin's voice is also heard in the film and several of his own paintings and character drawings appear.

"I also got some circa-1967 stuff that came to me, magically - flip books that he did," Gordon says.

Gordon approached Larkin after seeing a news report which profiled him after personal problems put his flourishing filmmaking career into a 25-year stall.

Tapped by NFB legend Norman McLaren as a shining new talent, Larkin enjoyed a meteoric rise at the film board with his work in the 1960s, capping it off with an Oscar nomination in 1969 for his film "Walking."

He left the film board in 1978 and ended up bumming change on the street. But he gained new attention as the subject of the animated short "Ryan" directed by Chris Landreth, who won an Oscar for the movie in 2005.

Gordon said she approached Ryan in 2002 as he panhandled on St-Laurent Boulevard and pitched her idea. He was interested.

"I gave him some music and he chose a song and he started to make a few drawings," Gordon said. "Things were slow moving. There was no big rush."

Until one of Larkin's buddies pressed them.

"It's Ryan's time," Gordon says the fellow panhandler told them.

"That gave us both a rush and a push and we really started to seriously conceive and think and meet regularly on this yet-to-be-named film," says Gordon, who owns MusiVision, a film and music production company.

"One day Ryan called me up and said, 'I got the name, I got the name. It's 'Spare Change."'

That added another dimension to the film, Gordon says with a smile.

"We were sitting right over there," she says indicating a table in the bar, which has Larkin's picture on the wall. "He said to me, 'Now that we're making a movie together, we're going to need official titles. I'm the director and you're the producer'."

She made business cards.

"That was the beginning of hell and back but a good hell. It was a great ride for Ryan and I on many levels.

"It was wonderful. I really loved working with Ryan. I miss him a lot," she added, tears welling in her eyes.

She compared their friendship to that of a couple of mischievous teenagers and said a real connection developed. He was a diligent worker, she got the money together.

"He didn't boss people around," she said. "He didn't have time to boss people around."

The project took on added urgency when doctors discovered a small tumour on Larkin's lung in 2005. He was in generally good health aside from the tumour and Gordon got the impression he was comforted by the fact she had survived breast cancer.

Larkin came to live with Gordon and her husband in nearby St-Hyacinthe, Que., where he was cared for by them and her sister until he had to go into a hospice. He died a week later, just two hours after Gordon had left his bedside.

Larkin had been experiencing a comeback with the attention garnered by Landreth's film and had done some work for MTV. When "Spare Change" is shown at the Montreal Festival du Nouveau Cinema, it will open for Adrian Wills' "All Together Now."

That documentary tells the story behind the collaboration between the Beatles and Cirque du soleil that resulted in the creation and 2006 launch of the "Love" stage production which launched in 2006.

Gordon says the lyrical "Spare Change" is a fitting tribute to Larkin, who always insisted he didn't want to be remembered for his past.

"He was always looking to the future."

Just ask the police and doctors on the front line - harm reduction doesn't work

MARGARET WENTE

The Globe and Mail

July 12, 2008

VANCOUVER -- Sergeant Mark Steinkampf knows every back alley in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. He greets the regulars by name and doesn't miss much. On street patrol one balmy evening, he spots a new face - a young, attractive woman on a bicycle. He motions her to stop.

"I can see that crack pipe in your bra there," he says. He pulls it out and dangles it in the air. "You're under arrest. Let me read you your rights." He drops the crack pipe and crushes it beneath his shoe.

The woman doesn't have drugs on her. If she's smart, she'll get out of here fast and he'll never see her again. If she's not, her prospects aren't good. A year from now, she'll likely be ravaged by drugs and infections, turning tricks to get the money for a fix. If she's very unlucky, she'll wind up like another girl, whose body was found by a dumpster, stuffed into a plastic bag like so much garbage.

Vancouver is famous for its innovative approaches to drug treatment. Twenty years ago, it launched a bold experiment to tackle the problems of the notorious Downtown Eastside. The guiding idea was harm reduction. If you couldn't cut off the drug supply or jail all the addicts, then at least you could reduce the secondary damage - HIV, hepatitis and the like - by giving people clean needles. You would surround them with medical and social services. Addiction, all agreed, was an illness, and addicts deserved compassion and respect.

Well, yes, great, but in the last line of this report are the causes of the disproportionate rates of oral cancer in the DTES - no dental service being one. Yes, a free clinic will pull a tooth if you are in pain, but not give you a free cleaning. So where is the money and other resources for that? The DTES malaise is stuck at the band-aid stage, throw dollars at the results of a problem, and prevention of the problem itself seems to be beyond anyone's vision. See housing, addictions, mental health, poverty, nutrition (on welfare...huh), well being, isolation, and the same tired unimaginative approach continues.
 
Vancouver Sun

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

VANCOUVER - The BC Cancer Agency is launching a free mobile screening program in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, where one out of 150 residents is thought to suffer from oral cancer, compared with a provincial rate of one in 10,000.

"We're taking a proactive approach and screening for oral cancer in populations of people more likely to get this cancer," said Health Minister George Abbott.

"The chances of survival are greatly increased if the cancer is detected early."

Dr. Catherine Poh, an outreach program leader with the agency's oral cancer prevention program, said a more intensive, closer-to-home approach for care is necessary to ensure people seek screening and treatment.

"One in 10,000 British Columbians is diagnosed with oral cancer annually, but the incidence rate is alarmingly higher for residents of the Downtown Eastside, where one in 150 suffers from oral cancer," Poh said.

"There is an urgent need to reach out to this community with strategies that will help prevent and identify disease at early stages when it is easier to treat."

"Our goal is to make access to screening easy," said Dr. Miriam Rosin, director of the program.

The increased risk for oral cancer among the downtown residents is thought to be due to heavy tobacco and alcohol use, compromised immune function, poor nutrition and poor oral hygiene, and limited access to dental care.
© The Vancouver Sun 2008

Copyright © 2008 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks Publications, Inc.. All rights reserved.
Globe editorial

The rights of drug addicts

From Thursday's Globe and Mail

May 29, 2008 at 6:09 AM EDT

Insisting that a Vancouver clinic be allowed to provide potentially life-saving supervision for heroin and cocaine addicts to inject their drugs, as a British Columbia judge did this week, is the right thing to do. It's right as a policy choice, but it's also right as a use of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to protect addicts from the arbitrary reach of the criminal law.



Logic-injection site - nicely phrased comment

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Logic-injection site

Kamloops, B.C. -- In disagreeing with the B.C. Supreme Court judge's decision to protect Vancouver's safe-injection site, Margaret Wente argues that the real solution is to stigmatize the "crack whores" like we do the smokers, for their own good. Isn't the logic a little loose here? Society stigmatizes the act of smoking because it thinks smokers should know better. Society stigmatizes "crack whores" because it thinks they are a pathetic bunch less worthy of kindness and support. How many readers can honestly say they see humanity in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside?

Human dignity is a value central to our Constitution. It informs and is informed by every Charter right we know. Thus, Mr. Justice Ian Pitfield was not creating a "constitutional right for addicts to shoot up"; rather, he was recognizing that our community's collective dignity was being threatened by our government's disregard for human life.

2nd Annual Women's Housing March

Sat June 14 @ 2 pm
Starts outside Downtown Eastside Women Centre
(302 Columbia- corner Cordova, just west of Main)

To watch the video for the march, click here

(it might say the video is unavailable--just keep trying)

On Saturday June 14 at 2 pm, join women in the Downtown Eastside Women Centre Power of Women Group in the 2nd Annual March for Women's Housing and March Against Poverty!


Drug War Chronicle - world's leading drug policy newsletter

Feature: Western Hemisphere's Only Heroin Maintenance Program Coming to an End

Every day for 15 months, Vancouver heroin addict Rob Scott Vincent, 36, went into a nondescript building on the city's Downtown Eastside where a nurse would hand him a syringe loaded with pharmaceutical grade heroin. Sitting at a sterile, stainless steel counter, Vincent would inject himself with the drug, then sit in an equally sterile waiting room for awhile as the drug took hold before heading out to do his daily business.

http://stopthedrugwar.org/files/hastings.jpg
Hastings Street, on Vancouver's East Side (courtesy VANDU)
Vincent was one of 251 participants -- 192 in Vancouver and the rest in Montreal -- in the only heroin maintenance program in the hemisphere, a pilot program known as the North American Opiate Maintenance Initiative (NAOMI). Originally intended to operate in both Canada and the US, the US component never got off the ground in the drug war atmosphere there. And now, NAOMI is winding down in Vancouver and Montreal. The last handful of participants in the program will get their last fixes at the end of this month.

In the program, which was limited to long-time addicts over 25 who had failed to kick the habit at least twice in previous treatment tries, participants used treatments of oral methadone or injected heroin. A small percentage received a pharmaceutical opiate called Dilaudid. Participants also received counseling and other support services. The Canadian federal government (then under control of the Liberals) funded the project with $1.8 million and agreed to allow the importation of pharmaceutical heroin for the project.


Original here

Doctors to visit poorest Vancouver residents to free up hospital beds

Wednesday, April 30, 2008 | 10:06 AM ET

CBC News

In a bid to reduce the number of hospital beds being taken up by the homeless and drug addicts in Vancouver, doctors will soon be making house calls to those who live in single room occupancy (SRO) hotels in the Downtown Eastside. Many residents of the Downtown Eastside are seriously ill, often the result of drug use and hard living on the streets, said Lorna Howes, the director of acute and community mental health for Vancouver with the Vancouver Coastal Health authority. By the time they get to a hospital, she said, they often need long-term care.