Pubdate: Sun, 09 Jul 2006 Source: Scotland On Sunday (UK) Copyright: 2006 The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Contact: http://www.scotlandonsunday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/405 Author: Eddie Barnes, Political Editor LABOUR PLAN 'NO CHILDREN' CONTRACT FOR DRUG ADDICTS DRUG addicts will be told not to have children until they kick their habit under a controversial plan being considered for Labour's election manifesto. A paper obtained by Scotland on Sunday suggests addicts sign a 'social contract' requiring that - in return for benefits, methadone and housing - they agree "not to start a family" and to end their habit. If addicts agree to the contract but then breach it by having a family they face having their children taken into social work care, as well as the withdrawal of treatment and benefits. The draconian measures are being considered as Labour MSPs respond to a series of tragic cases where children have died as a result of neglect by drug-addicted parents. As many as 60,000 Scots children currently live with parents with a drug problem, frequently causing irreparable damage to their education and life chances. Ministers recently declared they would not shirk from placing such children in foster care, but Labour is now preparing to go much further in the war on drug addiction, rolling out measures described by opponents last night as "vicious". The plan to stop addicts starting families, or having more children if they are already parents, has been drawn up by influential backbench MSP Duncan McNeil, who is convener of Labour's 50-strong parliamentary group. It has received a sympathetic response from several of his party colleagues. It will now feed into Labour's manifesto preparations ahead of next year's Holyrood elections. In his paper, McNeil, MSP for Greenock and Inverclyde, declares: "If the state undertakes to provide social security benefits, free drug cessation services, free housing, free health advice, free medicines and free social and other support services, then the recipients [would] undertake, for example, to enter a drug cessation programme with a strict programme in which they will become drug free; to submit to regular drug testing; and not to start a family." The paper declares: "An element of compulsion, currently lacking in drug treatment services, would need to be introduced." McNeil told Scotland on Sunday: "Having a family while you are coming off drugs or on a drug rehabilitation programme is absolutely mad. We should be using every means possible to dissuade people [in this situation] from starting a family." His plan suggests following an American scheme whereby female drug users were given cash to take long-term contraceptives, such as injections. "Some countries have said we will give additional payments for contraception," McNeil added. "That should be looked at. At the moment, all we are doing is giving people all this support and saying it doesn't matter if you carry on taking methadone for 20 years. People who pay the bills will not accept that." McNeil said he also wanted it to be made easier for children to be removed from the homes of drug-addicted families. The radical plan comes after a series of shocking cases involving the children of drug- addicted parents. In one appalling incident, Alexandra King, a three-month-old baby in Larkhall, Lanarkshire, died of septicaemia brought on by nappy rash after being neglected by her drug-addicted mother. Meanwhile, the parents of Derek Alexander Doran, from Elphinstone, East Lothian, have been charged with murdering their two-year-old son by giving him the heroin substitute methadone. More than 300 babies are born addicted to heroin and other illegal drugs every year in Scotland. Research by the Glasgow-based Centre for Drug Misuse research has shown that 60% of drug-addicted mothers and 85% of addicted fathers no longer looked after their children. Double the number of children live in drug-addicted families in Scotland than in England. While McNeil's views are by far the most outspoken within the Labour camp, his call received backing by other Labour sources last night. Plans to force addicts to sign a contract in which they pledge to get off drugs by a set time are backed by ministers and are likely to be introduced. A Labour insider said: "Duncan is on the extreme end of the debate, but there is a lot of sympathy for his position. The party will go some way towards the areas he is talking about." Another insider closely involved in drawing up the party manifesto added: "People do take seriously some of these ideas." Fellow Labour MSPs are also supporting McNeil's demand for tougher action in taking children away from chaotic homes. Backbencher Karen Gillon said children should be removed more quickly from homes where addicts were failing to show signs of improvement. "You have got to give kids the best chance and sometimes that is not going to be by staying with mum and dad," she said. McNeil's plan is just one of several other proposals being considered by Labour. They include offering free tuition to children of drug addicts who are being neglected at home. McNeil's call was supported by Scots Tory leader Annabel Goldie. She said: "I am pleased that at long last someone from the Labour party has woken up to the spiralling drug problem in Scotland and the current Executive's abject failure to do anything about it." However, a spokesman for the Scottish Drugs Forum said: "There is a vicious tenor to these proposals. What's proposed dehumanises people who are in need of help and support simply because their problems are seen as too difficult and complex for society to deal with." Stewart Stevenson, drugs spokesman for the SNP, added: "These proposals are totally unacceptable. What we must be focusing on is helping addicts get free of their addictions, not dictating to them, which might make them more reluctant to turn to their only source of help in the first place." But McNeil said: "We need to remind people that we are not about trying to sustain them on a life of drug abuse, but to get people off drugs. People need to be told that we expect something from them. We expect something for their children." A spokesman for the Scottish Executive said ministers supported plans to make contraceptive advice more freely available to addicts. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek