Pubdate: Mon, 24 Jul 2000 Source: Courier-Mail, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 News Limited Contact: GPO Box 130, Brisbane Queensland 4001 Fax: (07) 3666 6696 Website: http://www.thecouriermail.com.au/ Author: Sean Parnell Note: This is a different article than the one published with the same title in the Age. It also contains important additional information. See: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n1040/a06.html BEATTIE OPPOSES INJECTING ROOMS THE Beattie Government will go into the next election with a hardline policy opposing trials of supervised heroin injecting rooms despite a Labor Party commitment to thoroughly examine the concept first. Premier Peter Beattie said yesterday the Government remained opposed to trials of injecting rooms and his view would only change if trials elsewhere were successful and the concept had widespread community support. At the ALP state conference last month, Brisbane Lord Mayor Jim Soorley moved the party adopt a policy to trial injecting rooms. However, Cr Soorley agreed with a proposal by Mr Beattie that the issue be instead examined by the party's health committee and considered again at the next conference, expected after next year's state election. But Mr Beattle said yesterday he believed injecting room trials would become an election issue and the Government had to give voters a firm policy. "Even if the next conferonce was to pass a policy in favour of them, the timing's up to us, the Government," Mr Beattie said yesterday. "And I've already indicated it may take 30 or 40 years for that climate (community opinion) to change." Cr Soorley said yesterday he had acted in good faith at the conference despite having the votes to pass the motion and believed Mr Beattie was wrong in his view of community opinion about injecting rooms. "I am disappointed the Premier thinks he is the font of all wisdom on such a complex issue," Cr Soorley said. "There is no easy solution. I'm the first to acknowledge it, but what we must do is enter into dialogue with the community to find some solutions to save young people's lives." Mr Beattie said he had found no evidence of injecting rooms overseas having any success or showing any benefits and believed the Government's wider drug strategies were more appropriate. "Too often what happens here, the conservative side of politics tries to turn this into an election issue, then you get my side of polities that too often looks at gimmicks because they want to look terrific," Mr Beattie said. "I'm not interested in either. I want to make sure we have something that actually works." But Cr Soorley said the proposal was not a gimmick and governments should undertake "hard-nosed trials of every possibility, ruthlessly research-driven" to find a solution to the drug problem. "There is hard evidence of bodies in the street that what we're currently doing is not working," Cr Soorley said. Cr Soorley also criticised a delay of between six weeks and eight weeks for drug rehabilitation in Brisbane and laws which did not strip drug traffickers of unexplained assets. State Cabinet today is expected to agree to be part of a Federal Government programme of drug diversionary strategies which will culminate with more than $9 million in annual federal funding in 2002-2003. The laws will give police the power to divert certain people caught with marijuana for personal use to rehabilitation programmes instead of the criminal justice system. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek