Pubdate: Sun, 06 Jan 2002 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2002 The Age Company Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5 Author: Chloe Saltau HAVE WE TAMED THE DRAGON, OR CHASED IT UNDERGROUND? More than five years ago, the Atherton Gardens housing estate in Fitzroy became one of the first battlegrounds in Melbourne's emerging, open-air heroin trade. Now, as the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine records the lowest heroin death toll in more than a decade and police claim a kind of victory on the streets of Melbourne, drug-market researcher John Fitzgerald has told The Sunday Age the dealers and addicts are back. They are off the streets, out of the public eye and in "semi-supervised" settings such as high-rise flats - Atherton Gardens, in particular - and public toilets, said Dr Fitzgerald, from the University of Melbourne's criminology department. Although experts were reluctant to declare the year-long heroin drought over, North Yarra Community Health Centre chief executive Vera Boston confirmed residents of Atherton Gardens again felt threatened by "more and more dealing of various kinds of drugs" including heroin. "Residents of the high-rise feel that they are living in an environment that's not safe," she said. "The concern is that once it gets into the estate it's not publicly visible in the sense that it's not in the face of traders and politicians, but it's definitely in the face of the residents." While police despaired at the number of people killed on Victoria's roads in 2001, the heroin toll, which peaked at 359 in 1999, plummeted. Toxicology reports completed so far indicate 41 people died from heroin overdoses last year, compared with 318 in 2000. The numbers had risen most years since 49 deaths were recorded in 1991. "Sure it's a success in terms of ODs; that's a great thing, but the level of injecting is as high as it was," said Dr Fitzgerald, who explained that the heroin trade moved out of the estates and into the streets after a police crackdown in 1995. He warned that the relentless focus on the heroin toll meant problems related to injecting, such as the spread of Hepatitis C, risked sliding off the political agenda. "There is an immediacy that goes with having people drop unconscious in public that creates political momentum," he said. "The political impetus to do something is lost because people think the problem is better than it was." Ms Boston said heroin had been available "in patches" over the past year, and had been supplemented by other drugs such as amphetamines, tranquillisers and temazepam. Staff employed to walk through the high-rise buildings collecting discarded drug paraphernalia would find, for example, temazepam capsules "spilt like a packet of peas" in the laundry. Peter Wearne, a youth worker from Victoria's Youth Substance Abuse Service, added chroming to the list. "I have never experienced, except in the '70s when people glue-sniffed, as many people inhaling," he said. He agreed "in-your-face dealing" of heroin had all but disappeared. "It's back to the days when you had to know someone to get on," he said. "But that misses the point. No one's given up drugs because heroin's more expensive. They've switched substances or committed more crimes." Police say the CBD is much safer than it was at the height of the heroin trade. Inspector Brett Guerin, the officer in charge of Operation Leader - a blitz in the central city that aims to make the area "as unconducive as possible to all forms of illegal drug activity" - said there were 256 arrests for trafficking in 2001, 327 for use of possession and 68 for begging. "The reasons people use drugs are complex and varied but we can certainly claim some credit for (the low death toll)," he said. "It also shows that the best way to stop harm is to stop people getting it." Indeed, there is almost universal acknowledgement that market forces - among them climactic conditions in South-East Asia and a Taliban edict to stop growing opium poppies in Afghanistan - dampening the supply of heroin played a role in the dramatic reduction in deaths. Non-fatal overdoses, which peaked at 460 in December of 1999, are now occurring at a rate of between 80 and 100 per month. But Dr Fitzgerald's latest research shows the shift out of public spaces and into clandestine areas started before the heroin market stabilised. He said this was partly because of a bigger police presence on the streets. The return in recent months of heroin to the Fitzroy housing estate meant "that for all the rhetoric and good management the heroin has gone back to whence it came. We have come full circle". Inspector Guerin said anecdotal evidence did not support Dr Fitzgerald's findings. But Paul Dietze, from the Turning Point Alcohol and Drug Centre, said the fact that the City of Port Phillip (where drug dealing is traditionally residential) is recording the highest number of non-fatal overdoses suggests the trade has been pushed underground. Demand for withdrawal treatment also dropped significantly last year - Turning Point Clinical Services provided only half as many outpatient consultations in the quarter to September as in the corresponding period for 2000. Sandra Hocking, the clinic coordinator, speculated that users who had switched to other drugs had not yet identified the need for treatment. "Or maybe they have detoxed at home and they're over it," she said. But Ms Hocking said the "uninhibited, loud and aggressive behaviour" of people addicted to alternative drugs such as benzodiazapenes had created the need to offer clinicians a series of workshops on aggression management. "Health workers ... are suddenly crowd controllers, like bouncers in a nightclub," she said. "How do you make everyone else safe? How do you cut through the aggression to see what it is they actually want?" Professionals are also grappling with addicts in the grip of psychosis induced by amphetamines. Ms Boston said the community centre had also heard from residents worried about the more violent behaviour of addicts around estates. The challenge was to strike a balance between security and liveability, she said, but she welcomed impending safety measures such as concierge systems and security codes. Victoria's Other Toll 1999: 359 Deaths 2000: 318 Deaths 2001: 41 Deaths - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens