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Mom says shes waiting for addict son to die

Published on August 28th, 2007
Published on November 3rd, 2009
Jessica Kiunga

In order to protect the identities of the people featured in this story, the mother of a drug-addicted young person will be called Peggy Strife, and her son will be called Brad.

One local mother says it's time for parents to wake up and realize all youths are at risk of becoming drug addicts.

Topics :
Victoria Hospital , Prince Albert

In order to protect the identities of the people featured in this story, the mother of a drug-addicted young person will be called Peggy Strife, and her son will be called Brad.

One local mother says it's time for parents to wake up and realize all youths are at risk of becoming drug addicts.
Peggy Strife, who lives in a $400,000 home in a good neighbourhood, has been grappling with her 20-year-old son Brad's crystal meth addiction for the past several years.
"I'm waiting for him to die," said Strife about her son, who she still fears losing to substance abuse.
Strife and her spouse lived through their own period of denial about what drugs were doing to Brad. She doesn't want to see anyone else ignore the problem.
Strife disapproves of recent letters to the editor in the Herald where people have expressed opposition to building a youth treatment centre here.
"We have a high drug rate here and people don't want to admit it," Strife said.
When Strife was cruising the streets with a baseball bat, attempting to stop her son from finding and using meth, she rarely tracked down her son in areas like the West Flat, which she says tend to be associated with substance abuse issues.
"A lot of the houses I was at were on the East and West hills," said Strife. She estimated that there were six youth drug dealers within a five-block radius of her upper-class home.
Strife recently appealed to city council, saying that the youth treatment centre is "very much" needed in the city because drugs are hurting children and youth from all cultures and socioeconomic backgrounds. City council recently approved rezoning of land near Victoria Hospital, with plans to build the centre there.
She also suggested that Prince Albert set up some transitional housing for addicted youths to get back up on their feet.

jkiunga@paherald.sk.ca

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