Pubdate: Sun, 28 Sep 2003 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2003 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441 Author: Miranda Devine Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Kings+Cross (Kings Cross) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) VALE THE OLD KINGS CROSS, VICTIM OF LETHAL INJECTION DEATHS CROSS, Kings - Passed away July 8, 2003 Late of Darlinghurst Rd. Loved wife of Rex Hotel (Deceased). Beloved mother of Sebel Hotel (Deceased), mother-in-law of Fountain Hotel (Deceased) and loving grandmother of Gazebo Hotel (Deceased), Kingsview Hotel (Deceased), Landmark Hotel (Deceased), Madison on Ward Hotel (Deceased), Manhattan Hotel (Deceased), New Hampshire Hotel (Deceased), Millennium Hotel (Deceased), Top of the Town Hotel (Deceased). A loving sister to Commodore Chateau (Deceased). 95 years young. Dearly loved by all who knew her. Forever in our hearts. This is the death notice Kings Cross retailer Andrew Strauss placed in his local paper the day the Government released a glowing report on the injecting room at 66 Darlinghurst Road. Last month, Special Minister of State John Della Bosca announced the trial would continue for another four years based on its "success" so far. "The centre did save lives, there was no honeypot effect detected, no increase in crime or drug-related loitering in the Kings Cross precinct," he announced. But for Strauss, who owns Blinky's photographic store, right next door to the injecting room, and his fellow members of the Kings Cross Chamber of Commerce, nothing could be further from their reality. The shutters and For Lease signs testify to the dismal future of the Cross where about the only business still thriving is the drugs trade. In tiny Roslyn Street alone, there are nine defunct shops. Ask Cafe Pralinka owner Annette Nevin how business is doing and she says: "What business?" Nearby shops are reporting drops in turnover of more than 50 per cent in the two years the injecting room has been running. "No one wants to set up a business in the area," says Strauss. "So what's happened is you have Australia's most densely populated area and there's nowhere for people to shop. Kings Cross used to be for the Drysdales and the Dobells. But it's just become a suburb for junkies." So rife was drug dealing via public phones at the entrance to the railway station across the road from the injecting room that the police had the phones removed. Dozens of ugly young men in singlets and baseball caps scurry back and forth up the strip and down side alleys, bundles of $20 bills in hand, busy, busy, busy. The new currency at local pawn shops is "Nokia notes" - mobile phones so easy to steal and sell they are as good as money. When I lived in Springfield Avenue 10 years ago, the Cross was not exactly squeaky clean. But it still had charms. There might have been the odd gangster beaten to death in the middle of the night and mysterious screams outside. But, in those days, drug dealers weren't obvious unless you were looking. And Kings Cross was the only place in Sydney where you could walk up to get a newspaper at 3am in a nightie and overcoat and pop into the Bourbon And Beefsteak for a drink on the way home without anyone batting an eyelid. For a glimpse into the bohemian history of the area it's hard to go past The Little Black Book Of Kings Cross Characters by local Christopher Williams. It tells of William Dobell, who lived and painted above the old ANZ bank, Russell Drysdale who lived at 59 Macleay Street, regular visitor Frank Sinatra and "Lindy", the owner of Lindy's Restaurant who was "tragically beheaded by the dumb waiter in the Gowrie Gate building in Macleay Street". But the Cross seems to have crossed a line now, beyond raffish charm to degenerate misery. And the Kings Cross Chamber of Commerce blames the injecting room. With 16 local hotels closed in the past two years, chamber president Malcolm Duncan acknowledges SARS and a general downturn in tourism since September 11, 2001, have played a role. But the injecting room's arrival two years ago was simply the last straw. "It's just a maintenance facility for long term users who have tried and failed rehab," he said. Duncan, a barrister, wickedly described by Premier Bob Carr as the "Rumpole of the lower traffic courts", was born in the Cross and still lives in Victoria Street. He is no zero-tolerance crusader and believes drugs should be legalised. But he says the injecting room is useless. "I couldn't give a tinkers cuss if people want to kill themselves on drugs. But why should the rest of us suffer?" Strauss wishes the injecting room would be moved into Sydney Hospital with an entrance next to Parliament House. But with a new lease of life and plenty of good press, it may wind up the only business left on Darlinghurst Road, apart from the odd pawn shop and strip club, and the fleabag hotels which still operate as illegal shooting galleries. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake