Quote:
Originally Posted by Jets4Life
You must live a sheltered life.
Myth: most addicts come from the inner city, especially the North End. They also are all over North Main, usually down and out.
Reality: The vast majority of clients in treatment centres come from the suburbs. Would you rather have these people attempt to heal themselves, and lead productive lives, or would you rather they stay hidden in suburbia maybe even next door to you residence?
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Yikes, you missed the mark.
If I'm selling my house and there's a treatment centre next door, and it's patients walking about, how does that affect my asking price? It's the world's most obvious thing. If the problem is concealed enough that the "reality" above gets hidden, then my property value isn't affected.
Plus I'm merely transposing the complaints of St James onto myself when discussing this.
And now you're taking addicts from downtown or suburbs and concentrate them onto my neighbourhood. Doesn't matter where they came from, matters where they put them. Now they're around my family and affecting property value. Not saying anyone's gonna die, but if you asked almost any resident if this is a positive benefit to them, they'd say no. Is it a social good? Sure. But not in their backyard. Makes sense.
And lastly, there are tons of addicts around North Main (downtown), Inner City and North End. They're not getting checked into treatment necessarily and that skews your "reality". And while I wish them the best, there's a reason I am not raising my family there. Not because I think Armageddon awaits, but simply because there are nicer alternatives with less of that stuff.
Or atleast managed more orderly.
I want the centre to happen, but I wouldn't be for it if it was near me. This isn't an urbanism matter.