Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jun 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Farah Farouque with Gabrielle Costa GRIEVING DAD PLEADS FOR INJECTING ROOMS Tony Trimingham's son, Damien, 23, died of a heroin overdose three years ago. It was a lonely ending in a disused hospital's stairwell not far from Kings Cross in Sydney. The needle was still in Damien's arm when he was found. "We've already got injecting facilities," said Mr Trimingham with a tiny trace of irony. "They're just not safe - or supervised." After Damien's death, Mr Trimingham formed the Family Drug Support program. He is in Melbourne this week, talking to as many people as possible about drug issues. And his parental perspective, honed as it is by tragedy, tells him that supervised injecting rooms must be tried. Sometimes, he wonders if supervised injecting rooms had been legal three years ago, maybe, Damien might still be alive. "He would certainly have had a better chance," he said. Saving sons and daughters from drug addiction, said Mr Trimingham, is not a quick fix. "The reason I'm an advocate of injecting rooms is not that I think it's going to solve the drug problem, in fact we know it won't, it's just one strategy," he said. "But it will hopefully keep some people alive long enough for them to actually make the step to being drug free." New South Wales is expected to get its first legal supervised injecting facility this year in Kings Cross. In Victoria, the prospect looks far more uncertain. Mr Trimingham understands the fears that setting up such facilities will create a "honeypot" for drug users. But he said: "It will get them off the streets into a place where they're not in public view. It's also a gateway to health checks, counselling and treatment." Premier Steve Bracks said yesterday that the State Government was determined to do whatever it could to save lives in Victoria. "The death (toll) from heroin is totally unacceptable," he said. "We are serious about our plan (to set up injecting rooms), absolutely serious to have a comprehensive attack on drugs in Victoria." He criticised Opposition Leader Denis Napthine for supporting Dandenong Council's refusal to allow injecting facilities and called on the opposition to be part of the solution. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek