Pubdate: Wed, 04 Apr 2001 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2001 The Age Company Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5 Author: Chloe Saltau, Social Policy Reporter DEALING AS CAREER OPTION So often, according to youth worker Peter Wearne, drug dealing is a matter of simple economics. "Entry points" to the workforce are closed off so completely that some teenagers choose to trade in drugs because it is accessible and relatively lucrative work, Mr Wearne said yesterday. "You don't have to be a genius to sell drugs. It can make a young person a couple of thousand dollars a week," he said. "These are not 'Mr Bigs'. There are very few people who see this as an entrepreneurial choice but we have to survive. So what do we do? Drugs are an economy that is accessible to people who have no other opportunities." A fortnight ago Mr Wearne, of the statewide Youth Substance Abuse Service, cut a refreshingly unfashionable figure in the Victorian Parliament - a fresh voice telling politicians that their policies were excluding young people from education and work and, in some cases, leading them to drugs. He believes that while most young people have thrived over the past two decades, the seriously disadvantaged minority are worse off now than they were then. "We need to understand that drug use in the community is not about the drug. It's about a whole range of complex issues that are social and economic," he said. "Often there is a lack of a culture of work in families that is being handed from generation to generation. There is a whole part of that generation that, just because of their background, don't have any options. Unless we create opportunities that figure is going to go up." Some of his concerns are echoed in a leaked report from the Federal Government's youth taskforce, Footprints to the Future, which criticises the lack of employment opportunities for young people, saying many find the Job Network too complex. Work for the Dole was not properly linked to local networks which could provide accredited training, and education levels were too low for New Apprenticeships. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager