Pubdate: Fri, 13 Apr 2007 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Lynn Walker MOTHER'S PLEA - ADDICTS NEED TIMELY TREATMENT Re: "Calgary going it alone to get drug court in action: Feds haven't provided funding for program shown to keep addicts out of jail," The Journal, April 9. I applaud the pilot project to get treatment for drug addicts convicted of crime. Both AADAC and the Salvation Army have offered to provide treatment beds to successful applicants. On March 23, 2007, I tried to get my 18-year-old daughter into a drug treatment program in Alberta. She hasn't been convicted of any crimes and is addicted to methamphetamine (crystal meth). She consented to be sent to any treatment program I could find. I was in contact with the Salvation Army and some treatment centres providing services under the Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission (AADAC). I also tried a private centre in Calgary, the only one I could find that takes women. All of these places indicated that there were waiting lists and I couldn't get any services until the middle of May. Whether I wanted to pay for services or not didn't matter. There simply weren't spaces available. Waiting this length of time was not an option. I had no way of helping my daughter stay clean while awaiting entry into a treatment program. I am also very educated with respect to the impact a drug addict has in your home, and the risk to the rest of the family. I finally found a treatment program for my daughter in British Columbia through a high-priced private facility. She entered into this program April 2. To guarantee my daughter a space for treatment, should I have waited for her to commit a crime, then be convicted? Is there consideration for guaranteeing treatment under this pilot program when my daughter was unable to access timely services? Is the intention to jump the waiting lists to facilitate treatment for criminals? Is the intention to leave the convicted addicts incarcerated until a treatment bed becomes available? Treatment facilities, both private and publicly funded, are lacking within Alberta. The availability for drug treatment programs with reasonable wait times has to expand to include all addicts who need treatment, not just criminals. Lynn Walker, Sherwood Park - --- MAP posted-by: Derek