Pubdate: Sat, 06 Jun 2015 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2015 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441 Author: Matt Noffs Note: Matt Noffs is chief executive of the Noffs Foundation. DOB IN A DEALER WAGES WAR ON OUR CHILDREN NSW has decided that the best way to deal with the current ice problem is to have a media campaign. Last Friday the NSW Bar Association hosted a conference with the single theme of a debate on the association's position paper titled "Drug Law Reform". Those who attended weren't the bleeding heart type. They included eminent health educator Professor David Penington, Associate Professor Nick Lintzeris from the NSW Ministry of Health, Professor Ian Webster from the University of NSW, senior members of the legal fraternity, Dr Alex Wodak from St Vincent's Hospital Sydney and former NSW Police Superintendent Frank Hansen. This was not a line-up of the usual suspects wanting to lambast the government for its drug policies. This was a gathering of some of the finest minds in the country. And, overwhelmingly, the conference declared our prohibitionist method of dealing with drugs to be part of the problem. The Bar Association's paper states "the current prohibitionist approach to illicit drugs has substantially failed in that it has had limited effectiveness in reducing drug availability or drug use". The harms resulting from [this] approach for drug users and the wider community are considerable. Yet, less than a week later NSW has decided that the best way to deal with the current ice problem is to have a media campaign encouraging the public to "Dob in a Drug Dealer or Meth Lab". That's the best we can do? I think not. And it comes hot on the heels of the Commonwealth government splashing out $20 million on its anti-ice ad campaign. Anti-drug ad campaigns don't work. The US government, between 1998 and 2006, spent $1.2 billion on its National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign. The campaign, specifically targeting marijuana, was independently evaluated by a government-appointed research company. In considering the evaluation the Government Accountability Office concluded that the campaign had "no significant favourable effects on marijuana initiation among non-drug using youth or cessation and declining use among prior marijuana users". And yet NSW thinks a media campaign to ask the public to dob in a dealer is money well spent. It's not. When you start a law and order campaign around drugs you end up with low-level users facing court and going to jail. The big players rarely seem to get swept up. The courts and jails are full now and the cost is almost breaking the bank. Invest just one 10th of that money in treatment and early intervention programs and you could probably cut the prison budget by 25 per cent. The police say we need more treatment services, the community says it, all the health experts say it, the Australian Crime Commission says it. For goodness sake, Mr Baird, just deliver it! Even the US, the originators of the "let slip the dogs of war" approach to drug issues, is having a rethink. Legislators have woken up to the economic and social havoc being wreaked. According to US Bureau of Justice Statistics, more than a quarter of a million people were incarcerated at year-end 2011. In federal prisons more than half those sentenced to a term of more than a year are there for drug crimes. More than half are African American. The vast sums required to run the penal system are unsustainable. So some states have moved to decriminalise cannabis and more and more states are heading that way. And it probably won't be long before they start looking at drugs other than cannabis. They have to, because they can't afford to keep locking people up. So why does the NSW government perform a very passable ostrich impersonation when all the evidence shows that beefing up drug law enforcement just doesn't work? Political expediency maybe? A few votes but not many. On this issue the tide is turning, just as it has on samesex marriage. The biggest dealers live in palaces, have lawyers and accountants. Who will be caught up in this "dob 'em in" campaign? The majority, those who end up sharing their drugs among friends like attendees at a Tupperware party. In other words, it's our children who end up in the justice system. And it's not just money that is wasted when a young life hits juvenile detention - it costs over $150,000 to lock up a young person and often allows them to create large syndicates and realise a life of crime early on in the piece. So money is squandered. But more to the point, this again shows how the War on Drugs ends up being a War on our Children. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom