Times Colonist

Having the chance to make a choice for recovery

- DON EVANS Don Evans is executive director of Our Place Society.

Isat down to lunch in the Our Place dining room recently to chat with several of the people who rely on us for their daily meals. It’s one of my favourite parts of the day, as it allows me to connect directly with the men and women Our Place is there to help.

One man, in particular, caught my attention and we began to talk. He was down on his luck, using drugs to mask his pain, but glad for the bowl of homemade soup, salad and bread on offer that day.

When I asked what was bothering him, he said he knew he was going to end up back in prison soon because he was starting to commit crimes to feed his drug habit. He had tried short-term treatment programs in the past, but none had worked, and he didn’t know where to turn.

This is a story I hear too often. Someone suffering on the street, dealing with his or her addiction, only to get involved in criminal activity and end up in prison.

In my opinion, this is where the story should change. This is where a team of addiction specialist­s and mental-health workers get involved, dig down to the root of all that pain and transform a life. Unfortunat­ely, that isn’t reality. Instead, our incarcerat­ed individual goes through periods of withdrawal mixed with periods of feeding his addiction through any means necessary. Boredom makes the cravings worse. Anything to escape the walls of his own torment.

When released, our individual has no new skills, no new methods of coping with his lot in life or solutions for his addiction. And so he ends up back on the streets, seeking drugs and escape, getting involved in crime and returning into the arms of the law. This cycle needs to end. And, more importantl­y, Our Place has a plan.

Our Place became heavily involved in ending the tent-city crisis in 2016 by managing two additional facilities on top of the transition­al housing and shelter beds we already operate. Those facilities are My Place on Yates Street (transition­al home; 40 indoor tents); and Choices in View Royal (transition­al home; 50 rooms).

As more permanent housing comes on line via B.C. Housing, we will soon close down My Place. By the end of 2017, we plan to have moved every resident at Choices into permanent housing. So the question becomes, what does the provincial government do with Choices, that wonderful space once occupied by the Youth Detention Centre?

Our Place envisions transformi­ng Choices into a therapeuti­c recovery community. Working with Island Health, B.C. Housing and the judicial system, I believe that we can make a positive impact in our community by ending this vicious cycle.

Our vision is multi-faceted and intended to deliver a long-term recovery program in a safe, structured, therapeuti­c environmen­t guided by profession­al staff. This therapeuti­c community would provide a costeffect­ive path to recovery, and address the comprehens­ive, holistic, bio-psycho-social, and ecological perspectiv­es of addiction, homelessne­ss and criminalit­y.

Our goal is that every individual who graduates from this program will be in control of their addiction, have a place to live, a job and all the life skills necessary not only survive to in the wider community, but to thrive in it.

We want to offer the opportunit­y of participat­ing in the therapeuti­c community to the family Our Place currently knows and serves, and to others in the community who live in poverty, are marginaliz­ed and are hardest to reach.

We aim to accept referrals from B.C. provincial court (an offender might request entry as an alternativ­e to a traditiona­l custodial sentence); B.C. Correction­s (individual­s completing custodial sentences, who would otherwise return to the streets, have the opportunit­y to choose the Our Place therapeuti­c recovery community); and Island Health (homeless individual­s, who have undergone detox and stabilizat­ion, will be referred to the therapeuti­c recovery community).

We are still in the early stages of working with our government partners and private donors to ensure we have the necessary funding and assurances, but I am very excited about the possibilit­ies.

When I shared our vision with provincial court Judge Ernie Quantz, he summed it up best: “The Our Place therapeuti­c recovery community will provide a realistic alternativ­e to incarcerat­ion. Enhancing the rehabilita­tive aspect of an offender’s sentence will provide long-term benefits to society and the individual.”

Do you share our vision and want to help? If so, I would love to hear from you.

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