Vol. 11 #35: Thursday, August 10, 2006
Calgary's News & Entertainment Weekly
FFWD Weekly
NEWS
by AMY STEELE
Crack getting bigger
Residents, business owners urge police to clamp down on drug users
Dawn Holmes is getting so sick of watching crack addiction taking over her neighbourhood that she is starting to think about moving.

Holmes owns a condo on 13th Avenue S.W. and says crack addicts regularly get high next to her building or across the street in Central Memorial Park. Her condo has been broken into twice recently, she’s often "verbally assaulted" by crackheads and she is now afraid to leave her apartment after dark because she says she does not feel safe.

"It’s definitely making me feel uneasy and uncomfortable," she says. "It’s just driving me to the point where I want to live somewhere else. I just can’t believe the state the neighbourhood has come to."

Holmes is applauding the City of Calgary’s recent move to spend $6.2 million over the next two years to add 18 more officers to police the Beltline and the downtown.

"If there was a cop on every corner these people wouldn’t be hanging out. Enough is enough," she says.

Holmes is not alone in feeling that crack is becoming a serious problem in Calgary’s inner city.

Eleventh Street S.W. is also experiencing a lot of crack problems, says Jimmy Kritikos, whose parents own Kalamata Grocery as well as apartment buildings in the area.

"It’s horrible over here. It’s been really bad," he says "My mom’s scared to come down here."

Kritikos says crackheads have pulled knives on customers and some elderly customers’ have had their purses snatched. A man was beaten up in the back alley behind the store for his wallet. The family regularly sees people doing crack behind apartment buildings they own and they find needles as well. The grocery store has seen a lot of thefts and once a crack addict actually urinated in the back of the store before anyone realized what was happening, says Kritikos.

"It’s disgusting," he says.

Kritikos says often when police are called they never show up or they do not arrive until hours later. He would like to see some beat cops dedicated to the neighbourhood who could regularly patrol the area on bikes or on foot.

Local residents are also fed up with the growing problem, says Kritikos. Recently one resident decided to take the law into his own hands and started threatening a drug dealer with a baseball bat until police arrived.

Scott Calling Last, an outreach worker at Calgary Urban Project Society (CUPS), says he is seeing more blatant crack usage in the downtown core.

"The numbers definitely seem to be getting higher," he says. "The corners seem to be getting more crowded where they use and hang out…. I have noticed a lot of people I used to work with who were using alcohol who are now doing crack. There’s just so much of it out there and it’s an easy trap to fall into."

Calling Last says once people get addicted to crack it does not take long before they can end up homeless because the drug has such a powerful hold on them.

There often aren’t enough detox beds available for people who want to start getting clean and people often wait at least two weeks before they can get into longer-term residential treatment, that can sometimes come too late because their resolve to quit the drug is gone, he says.

Calling Last says there are no easy solutions for crack addiction.

"I don’t think arresting people who are hooked on crack is any answer," he says. "That would be a war-on-drugs mentality and I don’t think that works."

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