Pubdate: Sun, 15 Feb 2015 Source: Herald Sun (Australia) Copyright: 2015 Herald and Weekly Times Contact: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/opinion/letter Website: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/187 Author: Andrew Jefferson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) INNER CITY ZOMBIE TOWN Shooting Gallery Not the Answer A NEW push to set up a legal heroin-shooting gallery in one of Melbourne's most drug-affected suburbs - dubbed "zombie town" - has angered traders and residents. They are tired of junkies littering Richmond's streets with discarded syringes. But Yarra Council, the Yarra Drug and Health Forum, the Greens, the Australian Sex Party, and the Australian Medical Association are keen for the State Government to follow NSW's lead by sanctioning a six-month trial of a supervised injecting room. Local police fear the arrival of the state's first injecting room could attract more dealers to Richmond, keen to feed the habit of desperate addicts, leading to an increase in crime. They say more than 60 per-cent of crooks caught there, including drug dealers, come from outside Richmond. "They deal, use and steal," said Inspector Bernie Edwards of the Yarra division. Richmond Asian Business Association spokesman Meca Ho said Victoria St traders were against the injecting room, saying addicts were already scaring away customers. "It's getting worse, not better," he said. "I liken them to zombies, it's like zombie town." "People are too scared to walk down Victoria St because they don't feel safe - we don't need a shop attracting more," Mr Ho said. Richmond resident Jackson Ly was also not impressed. "An injecting room will just encourage more drug use, not less," he said. With drug dealing and illicit use rife around the Richmond Housing Estate, one Yarra councillor fears the area is starting to resemble crime-ridden parts of Los Angeles. The Sunday Herald Sun visited the estate and photographed druggies injecting heroin just metres from kids' playgrounds and a primary school. Users in drug-induced states were seen aggressively menacing pedestrians, while two addicts brazenly shot-up in a multi-storey carpark. Some continue to dump used syringes in streets and laneways, posing a particular health risk to young children. Cr Stephen Jolly said residents in Richmond and Abbotsford often felt unsafe witnessing drug-related behaviour or stumbling across discarded syringes. "We need to find a solution because the illegal drug industry is making life intolerable for residents," he said. "We're living in Melbourne, not South Central LA, and it's time to look at a different approach. If a safe injecting room helps us to move drug use off the streets, I think residents would support that move. "I call on the new government to allow council to trial such a facility." Fitzroy-based police officer Sen-Sgt Kelvin Gale said he had some concerns about supervised injecting rooms. "One of the big problems is drugs cost money," he said. "You're going to be putting more drug traffickers closer to that facility so potentially it might bring more crime in. "There might be $100,000 worth of drugs going through that front door every day. I'm tipping that money to buy the drugs didn't come from Centrelink, it's coming out of people's houses - their flatscreen TVs and jewellery." Greens Melbourne MP Adam Bandt said one Richmond resident told him they came home to find someone passed out after injecting in their front yard. "People are finding syringes in sandpits, yards and laneways and they're sick of it," he said. AMA Victoria vice president Dr Gary Speck said heroin contributed to the deaths of 132 Victorians in 2013. "Access to sterile needles does not result in an increase in the number of people using heroin, rather it reduces the chance of users contracting viruses such as hepatitis C or HIV," he said. "It allows drug users to be helped. It is time to bring Victoria's approach into the 21st century." Mental Health Minister Martin Foley said the State Government did not support supervised injecting rooms. "Harm minimisation and evidence-based responses to drug use like needle and syringe programs, pharmacotherapies, as well as treatment and support services, are our focus," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom