Pubdate: Sat, 01 Jul 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: Brendan Nicholson, Canberra ACT GOVERNMENT MAY FOLD OVER INJECTING ROOM The minority Liberal Government of the Australian Capital Territory could fall as a result of a row over a supervised heroin injecting room. A defiant Chief Minister Kate Carnell insisted yesterday she had no intention of resigning after the Labor opposition, a Green and two independents in the Legislative Assembly blocked the territory budget late on Thursday night. Ms Carnell holds government in the 17-member assembly with five other Liberals and the support of four independents. One independent, drugs campaigner Michael Moore, is her Health Minister. Ms Carnell and Mr Moore were supported by Labor and Greens MLA Kerrie Tucker when they voted several months ago to set up an injecting room in Canberra. That move was vehemently opposed by two former policemen, Paul Osborne and Dave Rugendyke, elected as independents on a strong law and order platform, and by some of Ms Carnell's fellow Liberals. They voted against the inclusion in the budget of funding for the injecting room. Ms Tucker voted against parts of the budget because of environmental concerns. The saga is built on a mass of contradictions, not least of which is the fact that Ms Carnell produced the territory's first budget in the black since self-government a decade ago. Labor has demanded Ms Carnell's resignation but could be put in the position of having to use that budget to run the territory with the help of any independents it could win over. If that happened, Ms Carnell says that she would not vote against the budget her team created. Labor is committed to supporting the injecting room so Mr Osborne and Mr Rugendyke could end up with a Labor government and the injecting room they do not want. Ms Carnell says the territory's constitution guarantees supply for the next six months so there is no possibility of money running out. The assembly is not scheduled to sit again until August. - ---