anti drugs crime reporter(weastar times/WP/Ebc):::
Drug and alcohol
rehabilitation services in Dorset say addicts and treatment providers
are being used as a scapegoat for a town's problems.
Bournemouth Borough Council said there were 59 services in Boscombe for people with addictions and it wanted to cut that figure.
It fears the concentration of services is linked to social problems there.
But organisations involved in helping addicts say Boscombe's problems existed before any treatment centres opened.
At
a meeting in October, Bournemouth Borough Council and Dorset Police
said there were about 60 drug and alcohol rehabilitation facilities in
Boscombe - a claim rejected by local service providers.
'Misleading figures'
The council's head of community regeneration Sue Bickler said: "We will do all we can to reduce this concentration of services."
The council has since confirmed there are
only two treatment centres in Boscombe and the remaining "services" are
accommodation - some of which is registered supported housing - but the
figure also includes bedsits where addicts and other vulnerable people
live.
One of the rehabilitation centres, Providence
Projects, said the council's figures were misleading and could lead
people to believe there were dozens of drug clinics in the town.
Treatment
director Paul Spanjar said: "That figure includes every house that
might accommodate people with learning disabilities, mental health
issues and there might be just one person in there with an addiction.
"Bournemouth
is really lucky inasmuch as three of the longest-established and most
well-run centres in the country are here - it is something Bournemouth
should be proud of.
"There's a huge drug problem in
Boscombe, but an even bigger alcohol problem - and there was even
before any rehab clinic was here.
'Changes required'
"The bottom line is they are looking for a scapegoat in drug addicts but Boscombe's problems are far deeper."
Ms Bickler denied the council was looking for a scapegoat.
She
said: "The council and its partners do believe the concentration of
services in one area is problematic, however, the fundamental changes
required in the area relate to housing and the high concentration of
single-unit, private rented accommodation."
Street
Scene runs two supported housing projects for addicts in Boscombe,
along with three residential treatment centres elsewhere in Bournemouth
and Southampton.
Director Patrick Gormley said: "Like any seaside town, the drug problem was here long before the treatment centres.
"Boscombe
has been known for years as a place of social need. There is the
occasional person who drops out of treatment and doesn't go back where
they came from.
"I think the problem is with houses of multiple occupation cashing in on this."
Bournemouth
Borough Council said it had drawn up a list of accommodation in the
area and services were being asked to sign up to a code of conduct
before the end of the financial year.