Pubdate: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2001 The Age Company Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Forum: http://forums.f2.com.au/login/login.asp?board=TheAge-Talkback Author: Adrian Rollins BRACKS TO SET UP DRUG ADVISORY BODY The Victorian Government will set up a highlevel advisory committee on drugs prevention following today's historic joint sitting of parliament on the drug issue. Government sources said former police commissioner Neil Comrie, who called for the joint sitting and is among eight speakers who will address parliament today, will be asked to serve on the committee. Leaders from both sides of politics welcomed the joint sitting as a chance to form a bipartisan approach to the drugs issue. The government hopes the committee will capitalise on any goodwill to come out of the session. But prominent Liberal MP Phil Honeywood said politicians were "all talked out on drugs". He said that instead of talkfests, MPs should go on camps with children at drugs risk and attend weekly sessions for drug users to familiarise themselves with the issue. "I think the wider community would prefer to see their elected representatives being genuinely exposed to drug users, youth camps and drug counselling sessions before coming back and trying to achieve some bipartisan approach," he said. Premier Steve Bracks yesterday nominated prevention of drug abuse as a key issue requiring more effort. "On prevention, we are making progress, but we need the whole of the community and the whole of government behind us," he said. "And I think that's probably the outcome we can expect from tomorrow." The joint sitting, to be held in the Legislative Assembly, will begin at 3pm with addresses by Mr Comrie and Dr David Penington. They will be followed by six speakers: VicHealth chief executive Dr Rob Moodie, Turning Point director Professor Margaret Hamilton, Archbishop George Pell, Salvation Army Major David Brunt, Heather Hill Secondary College principal Andy Hamilton and youth worker Peter Wearne. Opposition leader Dr Denis Napthine observed: "I would urge the government, in a bipartisan way, to develop a positive action plan, particularly with regard to educating young people to stop them taking up drugs." Mr Honeywood said most politicians were remote from the drugs issue and out of touch with the concerns of young people. He said politicians should spend time with addicts and the people affected by them to gain a deeper understanding of the drug problem. "Only then should they come to the table with genuine bipartisan ideas," he said. "Until we have every MP genuinely exposed to how their particular community feels, and have young people tell them what should be done, we will become increasingly prone to topdown (drugs) programs." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk