Winnipeg Coun. Ross Eadie apologizes after waking up in drunk tank
CBC News | Posted: November 9, 2015 4:12 PM | Last Updated: November 10, 2015
Someone reported incident to the mayor's office, but Eadie says he doesn't understand why
Winnipeg Coun. Ross Eadie apologized to his constituents Monday after waking up at an inner-city "drunk tank" Saturday morning, and said drinking doesn't affect his work.
"I know they wouldn't relish having a so-called drunk representing them, but again, that drinking has no effect on my ability to represent them," he said.
Eadie acknowledged he was likely belligerent after he "had way too much to drink" at multiple bars on the weekend, before ending up at the Main Street Project, an emergency shelter with an alcohol detox unit.
"When you're blind and you're worked up and disoriented and don't know where you are,… I guess I was belligerent and trying to go home," he said.
"I'm not really a violent person."
It started at the King's Head Pub in the city's Exchange District, Eadie said, and from there moved to Urban Shaman Contemporary Aboriginal Art, a gallery where he encountered a friend.
He and the friend continued on to a number of bars. At around 2:30 a.m. CT Saturday, the friend put Eadie in a cab.
"I really don't know what happened after that, other than I woke up at the Main Street Project on Saturday morning," he said.
Eadie added that he was taken to the Main Street Project because he lives alone and therefore had no one to care for him while he was drunk.
After leaving the Main Street Project on Saturday morning, Eadie got a call from the mayor's office. Someone — other media reports say it was a police officer, but Eadie said he does not know for sure who it was — had phoned there to report what happened.
"I realize I am a public figure in a political office, but it is troublesome to me that my non-criminal personal activity was directed to the mayor's office," Eadie said.
Winnipeg police declined to comment on the matter.
Eadie said since the incident was made public, he has received what he calls "abusive" messages and phone calls, some of them from blocked numbers.
The lesson here, he said, is to manage his drinking better during times of the year when he is prone to depression.