Pubdate: Fri, 28 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 ALP, INGRAM SHARE COMMON GROUND ON DRUGS NINE days after the release of the Penington report, the bid by the Bracks Government to establish supervised injecting rooms for heroin users is in serious jeopardy. To get the facilities up, Labor requires the support of two of the three independent MPs in the Legislative Assembly. It then needs to get the appropriate legislation through the upper house, where Liberal Party and National Party MPs have the numbers. If Labor succeeds in getting the legislation through the parliament, local councils would then have to agree to set up facilities in their municipalities. The Premier, Steve Bracks, recognised this was always going to be an onerous task. It is why the government has proposed five months of public consultation before a vote is scheduled in the spring session of parliament. One week in, the signs are bad for Mr Bracks. Independent Russell Savage has announced he will vote against the legislation. Fellow independent Craig Ingram has signalled he will follow suit. The National Party's leader, Peter Ryan, facing a critical test in the May 13 Benalla byelection, says he has very grave concerns. Ditto Liberal leader Denis Napthine, although both men assert their position doesn't necessarily mean their parties will vote down the proposed bill. Mr Savage, a social conservative and former policeman, says he has read the Penington report and sees no compelling reason to support the facilities. Fair enough. Having made himself aware of the facts, he is entitled to his opinion. At least he has read the document. By Wednesday, the best Mr Ryan could manage was the report's overview, while Mr Ingram has yet to read the entire report. Those supporting an injecting room in the Smith Street area of Collingwood would have a right to feel ripped off if the proposal is torpedoed by two country independents whose electorates are hundreds of kilometres away. This would be particularly so if locals back the proposal. But one question Mr Ingram needs to answer before he kills the plan is whether he and Labor are really as far apart as has been portrayed. Mr Ingram says his "gut feeling" is that the facilities are not the best way to go; that he is nervous about their establishment. "I recognise the current death rate from heroin overdoses is unacceptable," he told The Age this week. "But I don't think they (the government) are doing enough in rehabilitation and detox facilities. The fact is there is a waiting list to get into them. There's also a lack of police numbers, when there's a need to tackle dealing issues." In essence, Mr Ingram wants the government to funnel more resources into treatment, prevention, education, and law enforcement before proceeding with the more radical step of the facilities. He is not alone in this assessment. That said, Mr Ingram's desires are not that far from the government's actual approach. While the controversy about the facilities has dominated the public debate, Labor is committing a significant level of extra funds to fight the drugs scourge. In next Tuesday's state budget, an extra $55 million will be allocated over three years to fight the drug problem. From July 1 this year, $17million of these funds will be available. A further $3 million in capital funding will be allocated to build a new rehabilitation facility. At the same time, $20 million from the Turning the Tide program will be available, $35 million will be spent on Department of Human Services programs, and $17.5 million on drug prevention and counselling in schools. A total of $92.5 million from July. This does not include the millions of dollars that will be spent on employing extra police. Much of this money starts kicking in from July, perhaps six months before the first injecting facility is in operation. The first site may not even be ready until early next year. The fact is Labor is acting on the plea of Mr Ingram and others to put in more resources. But while Mr Ingram appears to want Labor to delay the facilities pending the results of the extra funding, the Health Minister, John Thwaites, insists there cannot be any further delays given the death rates. The strategy must be simultaneous, not staggered. Dr Penington and Mr Thwaites emphasise that injecting rooms are not a cure-all, that they are part of a multi-pronged strategy to fight the heroin problem. Put simply, injecting rooms do have the potential to reduce the heroin death rate. While the overseas evidence is sufficiently inconclusive to be distorted by advocates and opponents, addicts who overdose in rooms are more likely to be revived by aid workers than if they shoot up alone in a laneway. If local councils engage in legitimate debate over the coming months, and subsequently receive the reluctant but genuine approval of their communities to set up the facilities, should Craig Ingram, representing the faraway voters of Gippsland East, have the right to stand in their way? - --- MAP posted-by: Greg