Pubdate: Thu, 20 Apr 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: Ewin Hannan COURAGE AND A DASH OF REALISM The fictitious character Sir Humphrey Appleby would regularly counsel his ministerial master Jim Hacker that politically courageous decisions were to be avoided at all costs. Indeed, Sir Humphrey would have been frowning at yesterday's decision by the Victorian Government to give the go-ahead to an 18-month trial of supervised injecting facilities for heroin users. At first blush, the decision to proceed with the trial does represent the most politically courageous action of the six-month-old Bracks administration. But closer examination of the detail shows there is a strong dose of realpolitik underpinning the plan. First, the facilities will be open to adults only, despite evidence presented by Dr David Penington's committee that heroin use is a growing problem among teenagers. Senior government figures yesterday admitted the decision was driven by politics not policy: that Labor believed opening the facilities to minors would jeopardise the prospect of the injecting rooms winning broader community support. Second, the government has proposed an exhaustive consultation process that ensures Labor cannot be accused of imposing the facilities on communities that do not want them. Enabling legislation will be introduced this parliamentary session but laid over until spring. Trials will proceed only if local councils support them. In making their decision, councils will be required to engage in extensive consultations with local community groups, residents, traders and police. This breathing space should ensure the community will be able to eventually judge whether the outspoken residents groups hogging the media yesterday genuinely represent a broad cross-section of voters or merely a vocal minority. It will also allow the opposition parties and key independent MPs time to get off the political fence and decide whether they will pass the legislation required for the facilities to proceed. Politics aside, the State Government should be commended for having the courage to follow New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory in the pursuit of a solution to the escalating heroin scourge. The challenge now is whether the government can manage its way through the political, legal, and emotional minefield it will inevitably confront over the coming months. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck