Friday, January 23, 2009

Facing Drug Abuse

Re: "Methadone: A deadly party drug" (Leader-Post, Jan 17).

The Leader-Post

Methadone can be a good in-between solution for hard-core heroin addicts. While the one-per-cent abuse statistic seems low, it could be because it's not the police who get to see this abuse -- it's the staff at Souls Harbour Rescue Mission.

Working in-depth with 40 addicts at a time, we have seen our share of methadone users and abusers. We support the program, but not the "harm-reduction" theory. We celebrated with one of our alumni in August as he proved you can kick drugs and the methadone habit. It was a slow process, but he worked with a doctor to wean himself off it for good. He now serves as a full-time employee at the mission, working with other addicts to reclaim lives that were lost.

He says, "I think 'weaning off' was the best thing I could have done. I tried once, but it was too soon. The doctor knew my goals and worked with me and the mission to make me 100-per-cent addiction free."

Michelle Porter

Porter is Executive Director, Souls Harbour Rescue Mission.

Regina

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Pauchay faces charges of violating alcohol ban

This case has taken a familiar turn. Let's blame it all on alcohol and a quick fix ought to do it. I can tell you that anyone who lets their daughters freeze to death needs more than a 30 day program. It means their addiction is severe and will take at least one year of full-time treatment to change your life.

I would invite Mr. and Mrs. Pauchay to check into our live-in LifeChange Program for life controlling problems. Our campus location would allow them to live across the street from each other, and integrate their treatment with couples and grief counselling. When a tragedy like this strikes, I guarantee you're never going to get off the bottle, your marriage will never survive, until you deal with the grief.

MELFORT -- With his feet in shackles and one arm raised to conceal a gash on his face, Christopher Pauchay avoided eye contact with a crowd of spectators as he appeared before a judge in Melfort today, accused of violating his bail conditions by drinking.

The 25-year-old father from the Yellow Quill First Nation, who is awaiting a sentencing circle for criminal negligence causing the freezing deaths of his two daughters last winter, was released from the prisoner's box so he could sit next to his lawyer.

The evidence and arguments presented during Pauchay's bail hearing is banned from publication. Judge Barry Morgan adjourned the matter until Jan. 23 in Tisdale, when he is expected to decide whether to release Pauchay again pending sentencing.

Greenwater RCMP arrested Pauchay Jan. 8 — the day after Morgan agreed to grant his request for a sentencing circle — at a drinking establishment in a town near the reserve. He now faces charges of violating his release conditions by drinking in two separate incidents on Dec. 14 and Jan. 8.

Outside court, Pauchay's defence lawyer Ron Piche told reporters a brief medical exam by a doctor is the "last piece of the puzzle" necessary for Pauchay to secure a month-long stay at Saskatoon's Calder Centre for alcohol rehabilitation.

Piche said it's the defence's position that the intensive Calder program could be followed up with stricter bail conditions that would still allow Pauchay to live at home while awaiting his sentencing circle.

"The judge hasn't foreclosed that option. He wants to have all the information before him before he makes a decision. I think we're fortunate in that we have a very open-minded judge, a judge who doesn't just draw conclusions without evidence," Piche said.

He feels Pauchay deserves the opportunity "because the reality is . . . the struggles, the affliction that he has with alcohol demands some treatment," he told reporters.

Plans to get Pauchay into professional treatment have been in the works for a long time, Piche said, "(but) this matter was in court and there were all sorts of things going on, there was even a trial scheduuled last fall, so it didn't lend itself to that kind of very difficult decision that easily."

Since his daughters' deaths, "he has taken other forms of treatment, in the sense that he's spoken with his elders and some of his support network, and he's tried other means, other than the 30-day stay (at Calder)," Piche said.

No date has been set for Pauchay's sentencing circle.

Justice Minister Don Morgan said Wednesday there has been no formal policy by the provincial government to discourage the use of aboriginal sentencing circles and he has asked officials to look into the reasons behind the sharp decline in their use since the late 1990s.

Unofficial numbers released by the Ministry of Justice last week showed that the use of the “restorative justice” measure had gone down from a high of 39 times in 1997 to one sentencing circle in 2007 and five in 2008.

“Whether it’s a shift from the courts or the prosecutorial practice at an informal level, I don’t know yet,” Morgan said outside a meeting of the Saskatchewan Party cabinet at the legislature.

Morgan said once he has an explanation for the decline he will decide whether further action on his part is warranted.

First used in Canada in the early 1990s, the circles traditionally bring together offenders, their family members, friends, community members and sometimes victims to come up with remedies.

Former deputy minister of justice John Whyte said last week that sentencing circles are labour-intensive and present logistical challenges for judges, lawyers and the First Nations involved, but are worthwhile and need the support of the government.

by Lori Coolican for The Star Phoenix

Friday, January 02, 2009

Part 2: One thing...


"Martha, Martha," the Lord answered, "you are worried and upset about many things, but only one thing is needed. Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her." -Luke10:41&42

There is no resolution more important and more lasting than the one you can make for 2009. And that is, to make your "one thing" count. The "one thing" you can count on, is that if you choose to sit at the feet of the Saviour, you will never regret it.

No matter what goes on in this year, no matter how wonderful, or how tragic, you will have your feet firmly planted, unmoveable, unshakeable, if you have chosen this "one thing."

You see, Martha was running around making everything perfect, while her sister Mary was making the most of the time she had with Jesus, by sitting at His feet. There would be plenty of time to serve.

There will be plenty of opportunities, but lasting fruit is only borne when we choose to know that "one thing" of Jesus and His sacrifice.

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Thursday, January 01, 2009

Part 1: Be it resolved...

A friend of mine posted the following Facebook status:

Ron is "resolved to know nothing .... except Jesus Christ and Him crucified."
-1 Cor 2:2
What are your resolutions? So many people think resolutions are useless, since they'll be broken anyway, but this is one that is right for all of us.

>For 2009, how about we all resolve to have a single focus of mind and purpose. The Saviour. Remember, a Saviour was born at Christmas. We just spent a month commemorating that. Now it's time to put our faith in action by determining that our main focus this year is Jesus. He's the Who, What, and Why of our lives.

If going to church is not yet a part of your life, please join us every Sunday at the Good News Chapel. 1380 Elphinstone at 11:00 a.m.

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