Pubdate: Thu, 30 Aug 2001 Source: Sheffield Star (UK) Copyright: Sheffield Newspapers 2001 Contact: http://www.sheffweb.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/413 Author: Nadia Brooks SOFT DRUGS WILL STAY ILLEGAL, SAYS BLUNKETT HOME Secretary David Blunkett turned to two former South Yorkshire heroin addicts for advice on the cannabis debate. Sheffield Brightside MP Mr Blunkett was formally opening the new National Probation Service's South Yorkshire head office when he met the pair who are on drug treatment and testing orders. He asked them whether they had started off on 'softer' drugs like cannabis and whether they thought the Government should downgrade the drug from class B to class C. But he emphasised: "We're not going to legalise anything, there's not a chance of that." Phil and Lorraine, who are under drug treatment and testing orders (DTTOs) in Doncaster, both told the Home Secretary they had used cannabis. Phil told Mr Blunkett that he had started taking cannabis when he was just 13-years-old. "I think everybody I've met who's on heroin started off on cannabis," he said. Phil said his heroin addiction had landed him in prison a few times. He was put on a DTTO and said it had been "very hard". "Every day's a struggle," said Phil who is now training in carpentry at college. The pair are now meeting with probation staff five days a week and receive counselling as well courses of methadone to help them give up their addictions. Opening the South Yorkshire head office on Sheffield's Division Street, Mr Blunkett said he wanted to "stop offending by intervening in the right way at the right time. The more you bang people up in jail the more likely they are to reoffend," he said. Mr Blunkett also said that Britain has the second largest prison population in Europe - after Portugal. "We have to intervene in the early stages and prevent people literally falling back into crime. "We want to reduce the prison population and release the resources to invest in community action." He added that around 70 per cent of all burglaries are drug-related. During his visit, Mr Blunkett listened to presentations on three pioneering areas of work - prolific offender projects, the drink impaired drivers programme, and DTTOs. He also asked the public for their views on a wide range of options which could transform the way criminals are sentenced. He called for a "common sense, effective approach" to sentencing as he highlighted six areas of the wide-ranging Halliday report, published in July, on which he would like to receive public comment. Mr Blunkett again floated the idea of "intermittent prisons" where offenders are locked up during certain hours - for example, at weekends - but are allowed to go to work and see their families at other times. "How criminals are punished is too important to be left to judges and politicians alone," Mr Blunkett said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart