Pubdate: Thu, 02 Mar 2000 Source: Mercury, The (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 2000 Contact: 93 Macquarie Street, Hobart, Tasmania 7000 Australia Fax: (03) 62 300 711 Website: http://www.themercury.com.au/ HELP, NOT PUNISHMENT DRUG abuse and drug addiction are health issues. And that's where our communiy should begin its attack on these scourges. It's only when a community fails to deal with it as a health issue that it becomes a matter of law and order. And that, sadly, has been the case for far tc long in this country. It is encouraging, therefore, to see the State Government leading the nation in adopting a policy to divert drugs users from punishment in the courts to education and treatment. Tasmania has been fortunate. There is a problem with illicit drugs in our community but the evidence is that it is not as widespread or as out-of-control as in some other states. And we have for some years had a succession of state governmemts which have recognised that draconian laws are not the answer. The attitude of Tasmania's police force has also been pivotal in this far-sighted policy shift from punishment to treatment. It pushed strongly for the substantial rethink on the treatment by the criminal justice system of first-time drug offenders. It has encouaraged diversionary tactics to help offenders -- particularly young people 97 seek health solutions. The alternative is one that our community pays a heavy price for -- young people being forced into the downward spiral torn the courts, with heavy fines or prison sentences being meted out. The almost inevitable consequence is a turning to a life of crime. The burden can be measured in financial terms in millions of dollars spent on enforcement and administration. And in human terms there is an enormous loss of human potential and a heavy burden on families. There will be those in our community who would take a less reasonable view of Tasmania's bid to take a national lead on drug rehabilitation. Tasmanians who have suffered at the hands of offenders driven to crime by a dependence on drugs find it difficult to reconcile a ransacked house with a health problem. They might hold a different view, however, if a member of their family had fallen under the spell of drugs. For this policy of education and treatment to work requires a significant act of faith by the Tasmanian community and significant and ongoing resources. And it also requires not only the education of those most at risk but the education of the wider community that this is the path we must take. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea