Monday, September 16, 2024

Lock 'em up: Everything old is new again

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

And just like that, institutionalization is back. 

My head is in a whirl. After untold hours of my early journalism career spent documenting the hard-won battle to banish BC's bad old institutions rife with abuse and civil-liberties violations, the former executive director of the BC Civil Liberties Association is now the premier of the province and pitching involuntary care like it's a fresh new idea whose time has come. 

“This announcement is the beginning of a new phase of our response to the addiction crisis," said Premier David Eby in a statement released yesterday in which government outlined how British Columbians could now be held against their will for mental illness, drug use or brain injury if they are making their communities feel "unsafe."

"We’re going to respond to people struggling like any family member would. We are taking action to get them the care they need to keep them safe, and in doing so, keep our communities safe, too," said Eby. 

If it was possible to believe that a return to institutionalization would actually play out that way, maybe it wouldn't feel so damn sad to have us rolling the clock back 50 years. History tells us otherwise, however. The stories of suffering that journalists all heard in those years leading up to the closure of BC's big institutions were absolute heart-wrenchers.

The whole reason we abandoned institutionalization back in the 1980s is because it's a horrible idea that doesn't work, except as a means to shield "normal" people from realities they'd rather not have to think about. 

Like what happens to people with severe mental illness when they don't get help and support. Or, in this latest incarnation of "secure care" (aka imprisonment), the tremendous damage a product can have on its customers in a market totally controlled by the sellers/manufacturers and abandoned by the regulators.

Instead of trying to fix any of that, it appears we're just going to lock people up again so we don't have to see our policy failures in their shattered faces.

As researcher Gillian Kolla noted in The Tyee last week, B.C. is jumping to institutionalization without even trying to see how things might go if we actually had spaces in voluntary, trauma-informed, evidence-based treatment programs for all the people who are desperate for such services. Research and experiences all over the world - much of it right here in BC - have demonstrated time and again that institutionalization does not make people well, and in fact puts them at risk of even more harm.

Sure, temporary secure care might have a role in helping to manage some aspects of the social crisis unfolding in all of our communities. But it's meant to be a last resort, after all other attempts to help a person have failed. Please don't let anyone tell you that the people we're seeing spilling out onto our streets have had every social intervention provided to them already. That is so very far from the truth.

Our current social crises are in fact a result of decades of social needs gone unmet. We haven't even begun to try hard to help people with mental illness, substance disorders and brain injuries. Virtually all of the services we've got are patchwork, disorganized, uncoordinated, short-term and often unevaluated. BC doesn't even have an overarching social policy.

We have orchestrated a disaster with our indifference - and now we're going to "fix it" by finding new ways to hold people against their will? Not a chance. 

As Kolla also pointed out, BC does have the power right now to hold people against their will under the Mental Health Act. If someone is deemed a danger to themselves or others, they can be held. (And that definition includes threats and anti-social behaviour, as my uncle Joseph McCorkell found out back in the 1990s when he fought his own incarceration in the years before Riverview Psychiatric Hospital was fully phased out.)

How low will be the bar be for this new initiative? No details yet, but I'm going to take a wild guess that people who are impoverished, traumatized, unable to maintain paid work and with a lifetime of struggle and hardship will be the first ones in. Interesting as well that these new secure facilities are mostly going to be sited at prisons, not hospitals. 

To see brain injury thrown into the mix this time out just adds to the wrongness. Someone suffers a serious injury that causes behavioural changes that unravels a life, and our government decides the best course of action is to make it really hard for them to get any help, and then lock them up indefinitely when they inevitably fail to recover. 

As soon as I read that Vancouver story earlier this month about one person getting their hand severed by a stranger with a machete in a mental-health crisis and another person dying, I knew where this was going, especially mere weeks before a provincial election. 

Eby has been hinting at a return to institutionalization since 2022, when he was angling to replace John Horgan. BC Conservative leader John Rustad has made institutionalization part of his party's platform.  I suspect both will get plenty of support from the electorate for their positions, because everyone I know is sickened and fed up with the social disasters unfolding on their city streets. 

But the answer to the tragedies we're seeing in the hearts of our communities is not to lock people up. Where is the announcement of preventive measures to slow the flow of people onto our streets? Where are the services that would catch people early in their crisis? Why are we embracing the harshest "solution" first? 

I wonder if I will live long enough to be throwing out a bitter "I told you so" in 15 or 20 years when we are back to trying to undo the damage of this deeply sad return to institutionalization. People, we are making a mistake. 

5 comments:

e.a.f. said...

Thank you this post. Wasn't surprised by Eby's announcement. He wants to be re elected. This evening's news reported on the "problems" on Granville st., profits down, stores empty,, etc. We hear the same from other former shopping areas. This isn't about people. This is about profit and land values, and the middle class continuing to not notice the problems our society has.
It is hoped some one takes this to court. At the old age of 75, remember when they could confine people. Used to read Jack Wasserman, even as a kid, and he wasn't in favour of confinement either. His point was also to include men who used that law to "rid" themselves of their wives. Parents could threaten children also.

None of this will work. As you wrote, it didn't work then, and it won't work now. When people are released the majority will simply go back to drugs and may well consume more because they have been once again tramatized by the system. I won't be alive in 20 yrs, but I do hope some one is there to say, "told you so".
The drug crisis isn't anything new. Drugs have always been a problem in Vancouver and other parts of the province for as long as I've been reading the news. Its what happens when you are a large port with little in the way of policing and politicians who ignore the problems. What has happened in the decades past, is more dangerous and impactful drugs and more people accessing them at a younger age.

Its no one party's fault, its every party's fault and most of us living in this province. We just sat back while it all happened because it wasn't on our street, our stores, etc. Well its here now and its not going away.
No one wakes up on day to decide they're going to violent, homeless and a drug addict. It happens over time.

Tom Durrie said...

Exactly right and to the point. I think it was R.D. Laing who said that our institutions are turned 180 degrees around. Schools make people ignorant, prisons generate crime, hospitals make people sick, and s-called mental treatments and institutions prolong the problems.

Anonymous said...

Well stated E.A.F....Seems to me the "magic concoction" is a dab of "Big Money in Misery"...a dash of "Big Profit in Non-Profit".... and Build your tax base (federally ..Provincially..And last but not least...Municipally). For every addict receiving tax payer funded drugs; whether prescription from a physician or "hard drugs" @ a "safe injection" sight it requires (are you ready) J
1) A Janitor(Probably a Government Contract)...cost = $40-50 thousand per annum

John Thomas Zanolla said...

SORRY NOT QUITE FINISHED "MY ARITHMETIC ! .....3) An individual to prepare the ( "Sites for clients") ..usually a government union employee Nurse or LPN. $70-100 thousand per Annum 4) A Paramedic on site( in case of need for Noxalone or overdose) $ 90-180 thousand per Annum (Dependingon the hours of operation @ the individual "Safe Injection Site")...The needles need handed out ! ...5) A R.N. ( to do that ) $70-160 thousand (again, depending on "Hours of Operation" per Site) and of course the Legal and "Harmless drug suppliers"....who have the Governments "Blessing and "vested interest" in the Adastra Holdings stock Portfolio ( at least in British Columbia) Really Couldn't estimate the cost of "corruption and cronyism") A former premier who "pushed VLT terminals acroos B.C. enabling the B.C. Casino Laundering fiasco after the 2010 Olympics And Christie Clark announcing on Television..."Just bring cash"...which the Asian Transnational criminals did in fact. Now, let's touch on the value to a developer, of the Maple Ridge Psychiatric Facility.....Obviously...worth more in property taxes if developed into "Strata Highrise Condominium" complexes"..So it stands to reason why Facilities "Coast to Coast" Heartlessly emptied due to the Mindset...Taxes on all levels of goverment value the dollars above the souls and lives of the most vunerable in our so called "Just Society"...Not to mentioned the ex-premier retiring to spend more time"with his family" ...Even though a "Plum Ambassadors Posting" in Berlin @ $300,000.00 per annum, plus expenses! What happened to "time at home with my family" I guess Justin Trudeau "convinced him otherwise. Wake up B.C. Time to "Close the Lotus" Before we all get buried in the manure they dump on from "On High" How about drug testing for Politcians Policeman Firefighters Ambulance attendants School teachers and Anyone in the Health Professional with access to "Leagl narcotics" e.g. nurses pharmacists doctors and Mental Health Professionals Starting ti Understand?......They all need their Heads Read ! Oh by the way....add up the cost per injection site...Money for Nothing....they're kicks for free"...A question in closing ....Q: Why do the Liberal have all their meeting in B.C. and Trudeau spends so much time in B.C. (Tofino to be exact) " Maybe because his "Nose Candy" is readily had...and lo and behold" LIke the rest of them Kumba Ya.. I guess the "Coding IA ate my first 2 points made in the above commentary. P.S. Sorry about the sloppy keyboarding skills ....had to drop out of Typing class in 8th grade due to inappropriate "touching during class "by my male (He told us to call him Mister Pilkey) Can I sue the North york School Board seeing the statute goes back forever now...Oh and forciblebly confined by a fellow empolyee (Large Female) in 1981 in Calgary working for a carpet wholesaler who was demanding sexual interaction.... And the beat goes on and on and on....

Anonymous said...

I don't disagree with many of your observations and our lack of accessible and adequate social supports. My mother worked at Woodlands during that era and she took care of her residents with compassion, kindness and professionalism. As a public transit bus driver of 35 years I have witnessed community members that honestly require intervention to ensure their own personal safety and the public. It's been 50 years and things are not improving so maybe it's time for a proactive measured approach that fits the current times.