Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jun 2000 Source: West Australian (Australia) Copyright: 2000 West Australian Newspapers Limited Contact: +61 8 94823830 Website: http://thewest.com.au/redirect.shtml Author: Wendy Pryer PATCHES EXPOSE JAIL DRUGS MINIMUM-SECURITY prisoners at Nyandi women's prison will have to wear sweat patches which will reveal whether they have been taking drugs. The patches, worn on the arm or back like nicotine patches, are part of a Ministry of Justice push to make the Bentley jail drug-free. The patches, which prisoners will wear for about a week at a time, will be sent away for analysis and reports will reveal any drugs found. The centre, which was reopened to cope with a big increase in female prisoners at Bandyup Prison, usually has 50 occupants with only three to six months of their sentences to serve. Assistant superintendent Christine Ginbey, in charge of Nyandi, said yesterday the trial of the drug-free prison would begin when the patches arrived in the next few days. She said the drug-free concept at Nyandi began two years ago. Even sleeping tablets are banned. In the seven months to May, only two prisoners tested positive to drugs - one for cannabis, the other for amphetamines. It was easy for the prisoners to get drugs or alcohol because most were released to do community work, work experience or rehabilitation programs. Ms Ginbey said most of the prisoners supported the drug-free concept and prison staff often got information about suspected drug use from other prisoners. She said Nyandi's programs had been a big success with many women getting jobs with agencies such as the Department of Conservation and Land Management after doing community work for the organisation. Ms Ginbey said the patches were better than urine tests, which were carried out randomly once a month without proper privacy. The patches were just as accurate. Prisoners also are breathalysed for alcohol. One drug that is allowed is the opiate-blocker naltrexone. It helps ease the chance of former heroin users returning to their old habits. The proposed Pyrton prison in Bassendean will replace Nyandi and eventually the drug-free unit will operate from there. But the State Government has to overcome one hurdle - Federal Heritage Minister Robert Hill is deciding whether the State has breached Aboriginal heritage laws by approving the prison. Escapes from Nyandi, and even bad behaviour, can result in prisoners being returned to Bandyup. Three Nyandi prisoners escaped this year. - --- MAP posted-by: greg