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: Caroline Overington CHASING AN ANSWER Olwen McKenzie is now in her 80s, but when she was a young woman she lived in Sydney's Kings Cross. "It was quite bohemian, just like a little Greenwich Village really," she says. "Lots of writers and journalists, and gorgeous little boutique shops that sold hats and gloves." That was 1948. Things have changed. "I left the Cross to raise six children and when I returned, in the late 1980s, I couldn't believe what I found," McKenzie says. "It wasn't sly grog shops any more. It was high-grade heroin. Brothels and prostitutes. Garish, girly bars, the Pink Pussycat, and in every second doorway, a vile spruiker. And the place was absolutely flooded with pushers, people using drugs in the street, lying around in pools of vomit and urine, taxis being used as mobile brothels. I can't explain how disgusting it is." Now, if you have been to the Cross but not, say, since the Sydney Olympics last September, you might now be thinking: oh, come on, it's not that bad. A bit gangsterish maybe, a little risque. But you would be wrong. Kings Cross is, in the year 2001, a sea of human decay. "If you don't believe it," says 32-year-old Linda Stewart, who serves sandwiches to Kings Cross hookers on Monday nights, "you should go and see for yourself." So I do. It's 7pm on a Monday, and I've just parked the car in a back lane, behind Darlinghurst Road. Thirty-five seconds later, a girl, about 15, takes a shot of heroin and buckles over into the gutter. "She's taken too much," whispers Stewart, who is in her usual spot outside the Pink Pussycat, "but we can't call an ambulance." Can't, because the paramedics will give the girl Narcain to save her life, and then she will sit up, furious that her shot (heroin) has been wasted. "If she drops, I'll call one," says Stewart. But the girl doesn't drop. Eventually, she sits up in the gutter, groaning. Later, she can be seen picking her teeth with a hypodermic that had fallen into the street. "See, she's OK," says Stewart. In Kings Cross, OK is a relative concept. All around, girls are pouring (struggling, shaking, trembling) up from the strip clubs into the street. Tourism in the Cross is down, so the prostitutes have to tout for business. The first one out is almost naked, rake-thin and blue from bruising. She has what looks like hickies on her face, but it's smack sores (raging, infected acne that permanently marks the skin). She can barely stand, her head is bobbing this way and that, and her eyes are boring into people, imploring them: "Want a girl? Want some fun?" The people walking past mostly look appalled - although, of course, some are laughing. I turn to a bouncer and say: "Who has sex with these women?" "Mate," he says, "what they do down there, I don't know, and I don't care. They're junkies. They don't live long." Australia has a drug problem. This is something about which everybody agrees. It is also getting worse. Heroin killed 958 Australians in 1999, up from 737 in 1998. So something must be done. This, too, is something about which everybody - the government, the opposition, police, treatment professionals, the drug users themselves - is in vigorous agreement. But what? In an attempt to find some answers, the New South Wales Government held, in May, 1999, a historic drug summit. For the best part of a week, drug users and their families, police, priests and parliamentarians thrashed out the issue and came up with 172 ideas. The most controversial was the plan to open Australia's first legal heroin-injecting room. According to the plans, clients of the injecting room (who must be over 18, not pregnant and not first-time users) will be registered, then led up the stairs to wash their hands, collect their needles and candles and inject their own heroin. If they collapse, staff will call an ambulance. If they don't, they can relax for a while, then leave. The centre will operate eight hours a day, during an 18-month trial. Not, though, if Malcolm Duncan has anything to do with it. A barrister employed by the Kings Cross Chamber of Commerce, Duncan will today ask the NSW Supreme Court to rule the licence for the injecting room invalid. "We'll be telling the court the location (at 66 Darlinghurst Road) is all wrong," Duncan says. "Basically, it's going to bring more druggies to the Cross." What makes him think so? "Well, I did some research," he says. "I picked up a girl, a druggie, and I paid her to come here, $800 for four hours. I was joking to a friend: she earns more than I do. I did a rack of lamb. It was probably the first decent meal she had for ages. I said to her, `Do you think this (the injecting room) will make people take more drugs?', and she said, `Sure."' And so he was convinced? "Not just because of her," says Duncan. "It's not just her that thinks that. You should talk to Animal." Animal? "Animal. Raymond Nelson. He's a biker, and he hangs out at the Cross. He knows everybody, and everybody knows him, and he's completely opposed to the injecting room." Duncan gives me Animal's telephone number. But before I call it, I call Dr Ingrid van Beek, who will run the injecting room. Van Beek is an expert in the treatment of heroin addiction. That said, neither she or anybody else in the field is particularly good at treating heroin addiction. There are more heroin addicts in Australia now than ever, and more dead than ever. The war against heroin is not being won. "In one sense, what we do (at the moment) is quite immoral because we give drug addicts needles to inject, then they go off and do it," van Beek says. "Sure, they won't die of AIDS one day in the future. But they might die of a drug overdose, right here and now. Surely we should try to save some of them." Van Beek accepts that injecting rooms represent a significant shift in drug policy. In the language of policy makers, it is a radical move away from treatment and prevention (which many people say does not work) towards harm minimisation (which others say will make the problem worse). "Look, I understand this is a big, big step for people to take," van Beek says. "People say it will send young people a message: it's OK to take drugs, we'll look after you. But I think, if it does send a message, it is: we haven't given up on you. We want to give you more time, more chances to get off. "I understand Mr Duncan is running a court case on behalf of people who oppose it, and that's frustrating, because it just means more lives are being lost while we battle this out." Among those fighting to have the injecting room closed before it opens is the aforementioned Animal, who lives on the sixth floor of a collapsing housing estate in Waterloo, the kind where every light is set into the ceiling, under a perspex cover, so the bulbs don't get broken. There are three cars in the car park, and two of them have broken windows. Animal has a motorcycle workshop in his loungeroom. There are five people sitting with him, and all are chain-smoking. It's incredibly hot, and there are about 700 rolls of Christmas paper standing against a wall. I assume they are stolen. "Stolen?" says Animal. "They're for the Christmas run." Animal wrapped 18,000 presents last year, and gave all of them to the poor. He also does charity work for hospitals, takes sick kids for rides on his Harley-Davidson, and is vehemently opposed to the injecting room. "The injecting room is gonna be the nodding-off room; that's all it'll be," he says. "It's gonna be a roomful of people, stoned off their heads, with some do-gooder sitting opposite them saying, you know, you gotta get off this stuff. And meanwhile, dealers are gonna be hovering around the place, selling more drugs." On hearing that a legal challenge to the injecting room would be launched, Dr Andrew Byrne, who operates a methadone clinic in Redfern, virtually collapsed in despair. "I just don't understand it," he says. "What cogent reasons do they have?" Well, many businesses in the Cross have signed a letter objecting to the injecting room at its proposed location. Some of these people are clearly addled. Conspiratorial "Pete", a bloke who sells nylon knickers out of the back of his car to prostitutes, says: "I notice they're not supplying the heroin, so the people running it must be connected to the drug trade." The Uniting Church is a front for pushers? "Sure, wouldn't surprise me," he says. "Hitler invented heroin, you know. Kept his soldiers in line." But they're not all mad. Andrew Strauss, the owner of Blinky's Photo Shop, which is next door to the proposed injecting room, is level-headed, and livid. "We're already have a needle exchange, which has made our problems much worse, because there's people shooting up all over the place. An injecting room will just attract more drug dealers, and therefore users," he says. In truth, this is almost inevitable: the dealers and users will still be there (what is the point of an injecting room without them?) and the users will still be robbing people and selling sex, to pay for drugs. Of course, they will also be alive. "Heroin isn't a poison. It isn't like alcohol," Byrne explains. "If you drink a bottle of whisky, you might die. But if you take 10 grams of heroin (an enormous overdose) and are given an antidote, you'll just wake up. It's a remarkable thing to see: a person can be blue, comatose; you inject them and within five minutes they're having a sandwich and a cup of tea. Well, actually, they're not, because they shoot out of the hospital, looking for another shot." According to estimates accepted by both sides, the injecting room will save about five lives a year. If successful, more injecting rooms will presumably open. (The Victorian Parliament baulked at a plan to open five in Melbourne, but is watching the NSW case with interest.) Each will cost about $500,000 a year to run. What the chamber of commerce wants to know is: Would that $500,000 be better spent on treatment that helps get five people off heroin, rather than providing a place to have it? "What needs to be remembered," Byrne says, "is that this is a trial. Obviously, a trial raises questions. Is it worth doing more widely? How many lives will be saved? How much illness will be prevented? All very reasonable questions to ask, and only after a trial could one fairly start to answer them." In the meantime, he says, "Most of my folk (patients) have overdosed and some have sustained permanent damage. [When heroin addicts overdose, they often fall into comas, land strangely, and so circulation to their limbs is cut off.] One has crutches and loss of use of one leg; one has lost all the fingers (of one hand) and half his dominant thumb. Another died in the public toilets next to my surgery in Redfern Park last year. He would have likely lived if there was an injecting room." For people like Byrne, the legal battle is particularly frustrating because, when the drug summit ended, they thought the argument had been won. And, in many ways, it had. In passing enabling legislation, the NSW Parliament has prevented the chamber of commerce from arguing that the injecting room should not open on moral grounds, or by putting up a case that it would not work. Instead, the legal battle will likely turn on the definition of "acceptable support" and "community". Malcolm Duncan will argue that, since neither the chamber of commerce nor the Kings Cross Community Centre supports the plan, the injecting room does not, as required by law, have the acceptance of the surrounding community. Back at the Cross, Linda Stewart has packed up her food van. She wants to get a coffee and introduce me to some drug users. "You should talk to some druggies, because they're all opposed to the injecting room," she says, signalling to a homeless person. He is pleasant enough, but I can barely stand to speak to him, so overwhelming is the stench. His mouth is full of teeth like burnt matches. He takes drugs about once a week and, to Stewart's dismay, says he might use an injecting room. "See, once I dropped in the street and I guess I would have died but my mate called an ambulance. He also went through my pockets and took my 70 bucks," he says. "I can't have a go at him because he saved my life. But I guess that wouldn't happen (in an injecting room)." "That's not uncommon," shrugs Stewart. "You see people rifling through pockets while they're giving mouth-to-mouth." Among those watching proceedings today, if not in person, then in spirit, will be NSW Premier Bob Carr, whose younger brother, Greg, slipped into a coma after a shot of heroin and died in 1981. Although reluctant to speak about the injecting room, Carr has, in the past, admitted he was torn in half by the debate, and still has doubts. In a thoughtful speech given after the drug summit, an exhausted Carr said he had reached the view that, for most people, life was an inherently disappointing experience, and some people could not cope with that. Taking drugs, he said, was their way of compensating for the "mediocrity of existence". "There will be fluctuations in drug use but, in the meantime, some supportive policies will ease people through a period of maximum risk," Carr said. He understands that the Federal Government is opposed to the plan (John Howard has described the proposed injecting room as regrettable) but thinks NSW voters are with him. "The people of NSW are roughly where I am," Carr said. "They don't want to do anything which is going to make the situation worse." - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew