Pubdate: Fri, 23 Mar 2001 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: 2001 News Limited {YEAR} Contact: Box 339 GPO Adelaide, SA 5001 Fax: (08) 8206-3688 Website: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Author: Sian Powell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) INJECTING ROOM AWAITS ITS FATE CLEAN, calm, furnished with brightly coloured modern sofas and practical wooden and plastic chairs, the Kings Cross injecting centre is ready for business. A stainless steel counter is divided into open cubicles, allowing 16 people to inject drugs at the same time, making the injecting room the largest in the world. Kings Cross is also home to a disproportionate number of overdose deaths. The centre's medical director, Ingrid van Beek, said yesterday that half the ambulance calls for overdoses in the Kings Cross area were in Darlinghurst Road, where the centre is sited, and most within 300m of the shopfront. "But no one has ever died in an injecting centre overseas," Dr van Beek said. The centre will not open for the 18-month trial, though, until legal challenges mounted by the Kings Cross Chamber of Commerce have been overcome. Justice Brian Sully of the NSW Supreme Court yesterday reserved his decision following a two-day hearing. The chamber argues a licence should not have been granted for the injecting room, since the "sufficient" community interest required by the legislation was never demonstrated, and that the concerns of adjacent businesses should be given more weight than the opinions of residents elsewhere in the area. The Uniting Church's Reverend Harry Herbert said if it were ruled that sufficient community acceptance had not been demonstrated, then more evidence would be found and a licence applied for again. Similarly, the chamber of commerce's Malcolm Duncan said the fight would continue, "to the wire". Meanwhile, five staff are already on the books, and the injecting centre is completely fitted out with a waiting room, the injecting room itself and a recovery lounge, where tea and coffee will be available. Dr van Beek said yesterday that word had spread among the drug-using population and, during one tour for local businesses, the security guard at the front door was approached by 25 addicts asking if the centre was open and whether they could inject in it. "We showed some users through," Dr van Beek said. She asked them if they would be able to abide by the no-smoking policy. They endorsed it, she said, because they didn't want holes burnt into the new furniture. "There was pride immediately, which was really touching." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F