Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, obviously I rise to speak in favour of this motion. Mr. Speaker, I guess I should preface it by saying that it seems to be that the Members on the other side are feeling a little bit under attack and maybe it appears as though we're not saying they're doing anything good at all. So let me say if I'm pointing out anything that they're falling short on, it's not to say that we're saying that they're not doing anything good at all. They're otherwise perfect, I'm sure.
---Applause
Except for the issue I'm dealing with at the time. So, yes, I am willing to give them all the credit. But with respect to the addictions issue, Mr. Speaker, I really believe that the silence by this government with this issue is quite deafening. It is really out there and I've raised this question and raised this issue many times in the House and I could go back to Hansard and give you examples of at least 10 cases or as many times as I've asked the questions, the Minister of Health and Social Services will say we have a plan and we have to take careful, measured steps. We have to be strategic about this. The Minister has been studying and writing up a plan for two years in the last Assembly and at least a year here. I really don't think he has the luxury of doing it for another three years in terms of a plan.
Mr. Speaker, let me tell you about what the community is doing. Obviously everybody knows the urgency of this. There is a group called Yellowknife Coalition for
Community Wellness that was set up three years ago or so. It is completely volunteer based. Within that they have what is called the COPS program. This is a community group in Yellowknife who has had enough with the violence and vandalism that is going on on the streets and people just wanted to pull up their boots and say they wanted to do something about it. They were able to find all of the equipment they need from the businesses and they patrol our streets at night. I was just talking to one of the organizers and they get no money from the government whatsoever. Not one cent. Now I would say that is one area this government could do something about.
The second thing, Mr. Speaker, I was walking my dogs in my riding of Range Lake. I live across from the school. In the summertime when I walk there I can smell drugs coming out of the backyard of the school. I can see the kids running from there. That has been an issue. I can tell you what the school boards are doing. Just the other day this car stopped by me and said he has been hired as a security...Maybe I shouldn't say this to everybody, but anyway. There is a security that school boards have hired out of their own money to hire a security and his job is to watch all the schools in the city from 8:00 at night until 8:00 in the morning. I believe it's a cost-sharing measure between the two school boards. Now, that is the money the school boards are paying, money that could have gone to the kids in the classrooms, because the communities are feeling they had to do something about it. I don't think this government is going to come with a special warrant to look after that, Mr. Speaker.
I'm telling you, this is all coming from the increased level of drug problems that we have. I was completely shocked two years ago when I went to one of the launching meetings for the Yellowknife Coalition of Community Wellness and I got talking to two women that I grew up with. I used to party with them in my younger years.
---Laughter
Mr. Speaker, I was shocked to learn that they have spent the last 10 years dealing with their girls who got addicted to cocaine. I had no idea that this was going on in my own town. To tell me about how devastating it is to have their kids hooked up on cocaine, who are willing to do anything to get their next fix, who are willing to sell their mother, literally, to get their habit...I'm sorry, but they were engaged in prostitution. All the things that they would not otherwise do and they had to send their kids down south and pay out of their own pocket because they could not get the service they need for young kids in Yellowknife.
Mr. Speaker, I don't mind giving credit to the government where credit is due and one of the things that the government has done lately is that concentration on drinking and driving area. We have almost zero tolerance against drinking and driving, but that is one very narrow area of addiction that we are dealing with. It's even a very narrow area of alcohol addiction. There are a lot of other addictions for us to deal with, Mr. Speaker. I have to concentrate here.
---Laughter
Sorry, Mr. Speaker. I should also say that the Minister of Health and Social Services has done a good job in promoting almost zero tolerance against smoking addiction. We all now know that smoking is bad for us and there's a very aggressive campaign going on to keep the kids from starting smoking because we know how hard that is. But let me tell you, Mr. Speaker, I don't think there is anything more difficult to quit once they've started -- from the information that I'm getting -- than crack cocaine. I think we all understand young people are up to trying new things. In our day we had our own stuff that was not as harmful as crack cocaine. The worst thing about crack cocaine is that there is no real second chance. It's really important that we make sure the kids don't start in the first place. It's really important to know that this crack cocaine is not just in downtown Yellowknife, but that it's in the suburbs and in the living room of all the houses. It's not discriminatory in any way. It's not just in Yellowknife. It's in Hay River, it's in Inuvik, it's in Norman Wells and it's even in smaller communities like Deline or Fort Providence.
I tell you, if we let this stuff spread without any kind of aggressive campaign, we are going to pay for it. It's going to cost us a lot. Our schools are going to be filled with kids that are being abandoned by their parents who are using drugs, or teenagers who are leaving school because they're hooked on drugs. I think it will do us a lot more good to do something now than to have everybody get hooked on it and pay a lot harsher price for it years down the road.
Mr. Speaker, I mentioned earlier in my Member's statement some of the things that we are already paying for. I don't want the Minister and the government to get the idea that we are asking for a $10 million alcohol and drug treatment centre or something like that. I am willing to suggest that we could do better with what we are doing already. I've already indicated that the Somba K'e Centre, the government is paying bills to maintain that building. We're paying a mortgage for that building. We can't just wash our hands of it. I cannot tell you how many meetings we have had between the jurisdiction of Health and Social Services, Housing Corporation and whatever arms of the government that have been involved in just dealing with who owns it. I mean, it's just ridiculous and we're spending hundreds of thousands of dollars just to keep that building standing when we could really be putting our heads together to see what we can do about that.
I have mentioned earlier, Mr. Speaker, that government is already spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in sending people down south for treatment. I understand some of them have to go down south. But for all the problems we have and we are a small population and if we get 10,000 of our people or even 5,000 or even 2,000 people addicted to cocaine it could destroy our community. Honestly, I don't think that is being alarmist. We are a very small community and drugs are going into regular people everywhere. If you're going to accuse me of, I don't mind crying wolf or being an alarmist or embellishing. I'd be happy to do that. I think really the time has come and there's no time to plan for five, 10, 15, 20 years.
I just want to say, Mr. Speaker, I think we could turn this into an opportunity. Honestly, we should spend as much time talking about how we deal with our addiction problems as much as we're dealing with how much money we can get out of the federal government. What good is getting all the money and power from Ottawa if our kids are not able to go to school, they are not being fed, and the men are abusing women? We just read in a newspaper article last week that courts are being filled with men who are abusing women because of alcohol addiction. The paper said that, Mr. Speaker. This man
punched his wife outside of a house because she wanted to go home. She didn't want to stay at the party and he punched her four times. That article said almost all of the charges that are being brought forward are because of abuse of alcohol. Alcohol used and abused, drugs used and abused, and gambling used and abused in our communities are killing our people and they are a bundle of slow motion, silent killers. I just want to be really serious about that.
I know this is in the papers and is getting highlighted, but I tell you, I have been raising this issue, and there are many Members in this House who have been raising this for many, many years; at least for five years. None of this is new; it's that things are speeding up. Crack cocaine is not giving us the time to plan and talk about it like marijuana did or even hashish did. It's not the kind of drug where you can do it when you're young and you get over it and then you move on and become a fully functioning citizen. Crack cocaine is not forgiving and we have to stop it. The government has to put in extra money for RCMP. There are lots of things happening, but I'm telling you this is an opportunity for the NWT to set an example for all of Canada. We could be the kind of place where people from down south will send their people up here because we have such a great program, we're on the ball, and we're dealing with it. I'm not even asking for the government to set it up in Yellowknife; they could do it in Inuvik, Hay River, Norman Wells, Deline. There are buildings all around the communities that are sitting empty. I am just asking for the government and the Minister to make a public statement, make an admission that they are totally aware of this problem and that this is totally on the top of their agenda and they're going to have a plan of action.
Lastly, Mr. Speaker, I mentioned earlier about the shortage of mental health and addictions workers. The Minister has said on many occasions that he's doing something about it. He has a plan and I have already pointed out that we are really not paying attention in that area as much as government should be required to do if it is committed to delivering the program that they have set out to do. Mr. Speaker, crack cocaine is not only a drug problem, it's not only a social problem, but it is a clinical problem. It needs clinical people who are qualified to deal with chemical addiction. They need people who can write the prescriptions so they are managed clinically by physicians who are qualified to do that. As I stand here, I am told that the recruitment and retention person who is in charge of recruiting and filling positions at the hospital, her contract was not renewed and we are falling behind in this area. I was saying that to indicate that as much as the Minister likes to say, I'm willing to give him credit in that he works hard and is doing a lot of good in a lot of areas. I'm not saying he's not perfect. He's almost perfect...
---Applause
...but in this area, honest to God, Mr. Speaker -- and I think everybody said this really, really well -- we are really running out of time and it's about time that we got on top of it. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.