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Safe-injection site opens in Vancouver

Vancouver — With some of its potential clients huddled nearby, North America's first authorized drug-injection site had its long-awaited official opening on Monday.

The so-called safe-injection site won't be open to addicts for about another week, but its political backers greeted the move with whoops and cheers.

There were also emotional memories of addicts killed by overdoses and disease caused by drug use. More...
  New safe injection site
 

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Catch-22 for Edmonton Sober Club

A 'sober bar' in Edmonton that has been a refuge for recovering alcoholics and addicts for years has been told by city officials that it must now get a liquor license if it wants to continue to allow patrons to smoke. But when they applied for a liquor license, they were turned down because they did not plan to actually serve alcohol.
The Keep it Simple Club in north-side Edmonton serves juice, soda and food to 300 members, who can also attend 12 step meetings in a back room. The club is like many "Alano Clubs" that provide an alternative for alcoholics who want to stay away from the temptation of alcohol-serving establishments. More...

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Drug sites: worth a try
EDITORIAL - The Globe and Mail

The safe-injection site for heroin and cocaine users that opened in Vancouver this week is an important step toward treating addictions as primarily a medical problem, rather than a legal one.

Providing addicts a safer place to inject illegal drugs may seem a radical departure in the context of "the war on drugs." U.S. anti-drug czar John Walter has denounced the Vancouver program as a form of "state-sponsored suicide." As the first program of its kind in North America, it has been accused of legitimizing illegal drug use. More...

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To: mark@markelliot.com
Subject: Hi

Mark,

A pleasant surprise to find out where that awesome dj from 580 radio in the
1970s is now. I can't tell you how many times I listened to you playing
"Take a Chance on Me" on the top 5 at 9 in 1978!

I am a gay man in his 40s who is a victor of sexual abuse as a child. I
would like to read your article from The Star but the link on your site
doesn't seem to work any longer. More...

Ex-gambling addict offering others a hand
Opens treatment centre in Napierville. Claude Bilodeau provides counselling, financial advice - but won't accept subsidies from Loto-Québec

A former gambling addict who worked as a male prostitute to pay for his habit opened a treatment centre yesterday to help others whose lives have been ruined by games of chance.

The Claude Bilodeau Pavilion, named after its founder, will operate out of a renovated house by a river in this town 40 kilometres south of Montreal.

The centre will offer counselling and financial advice to people whose lives have been destroyed by the roll of the dice or the ring of the slot machine.

Despite the fact the Quebec government promotes and manages gambling, Bilodeau warned, it's not safe. More...

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U.K.: Ecstasy and crack flourish in the nation's rural idylls

The death of Jade Slack laid bare the massive drug problem in rural areas. Stephen Khan, Scotland editor, reports on a grim situation in the far north

It was known locally as the rhubarb village. Nowhere were the sweet, earthy flavours of an idyllic English summer more tangible than in Galgate, Lancashire. Those days have gone now. Fine fruit is history. Ecstasy dealers and juvenile drug tragedies have arrived. More...
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Dad Convicted of Making Son Sell Drugs

PHILADELPHIA -- A man was convicted of child endangerment and drug trafficking after his 12-year-old son testified that he forced him to deal drugs at an abandoned house, even making him carry a gun.

Edward Sheed Sr., 38, was also convicted by a judge Monday of corrupting the morals of a minor and firearms violations. He faces at least 30 years in prison when he is sentenced next month.

Edward Sheed Jr. testified Monday that in the summer of 2002, when he was 11, his father took him to help sell crack cocaine almost every day. He said he was scared to refuse because his father threatened to hit him. More...

Dr Steven R. Miller Ph.D

      

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HARM REDUCTION THERAPY
HOME-BREWED BOOZE AND DOCTORING

By Mark Elliot

John had lived in the back of a downtown Toronto community center for as long as anyone could remember. "He was there for the past 14 years as far as we've been able to tell," says Art Manuel, the director of the harm reduction program at Toronto’s Seaton House homeless shelter. "He was blind when we found him - drinking anything he could find that had alcohol in it."

Manuel’s harm reduction program took John in to care for him in a way that was unheard of until just a few years ago. In 1996, a coroner’s investigation into the freezing deaths of three homeless men led to the start of the Seaton House program. Recommendations in the report ordered authorities in Toronto to provide an alternative to abstinence-based recovery. "No one was allowed in shelters if they were drunk and certainly not if they were still drinking," he says. "That left many of the most vulnerable people in the system on the streets drinking whatever they could find." The neighborhood stores around the Seaton House shelter stock plentiful supplies of mouthwash, Lysol, cheap colognes, and Chinese cooking wines - the drinking stuff of the bottom-end alcoholic. As a long-time drunk once taught me: "Mix it with orange pop and you can drink anything."
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