Pubdate: Sat, 11 Oct 1997 Source: The Times, UK Contact: Police chief to be joined by second drug tsar By Valerie Elliott and Stewart Tendler THE Government is so concerned by the threat of drugs that it has decided to appoint two "drugs tsars" to lead a campaign against the problem. Keith Hellawell, the outspoken Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police and a national expert on drug problems, is to lead the work with police and on the ground. He is to be joined by a second person who has experience of prisons and drug treatment to share the workload. The precise division of responsibilities and the Government's approach to a new national drugs strategy will be announced next week by Ann Taylor, the Leader of the Commons and chairman of a Cabinet subcommittee on drug problems. The decision to split the role came after ministers found great difficulty reaching a decision about the choice of tsar. Part of the problem may have been that ministers felt that Mr Hellawell, 56, may have been too old to reach out to young people and their drug culture. But the scale of the task was also a factor which persuaded ministers that they should have two figures at the helm. Mrs Taylor is expected to emphasise next week that the Government has no intention of legalising cannabis. The tsars are to have special adviser posts in the Cabinet Office. Salaries are not known, but the present maximum salary for a special adviser is £73,000. Mr Hellawell, who held his current post for seven years, earns closer to £100,000 and it is possible that Mr Blair might increase the salary of the new job with the agreement of Parliament. Mr Hellawell, a member of the Home Office's advisory council on the misuse of drugs since 1994, has repeatedly given warning about the dangers to society from drug abuse, including telling parents that soft drugs were as much a part of today's youth culture as tobacco was to his generation. He has also revealed evidence of heroin addicts as young as 12 turning to prostitution, and the need for compulsory treatment of drug misusers. Mrs Taylor has been privately studying work in Europe on drug problems and spent two days this week in France and Holland. The trip included a visit to a coffee shop in Amsterdam where cannabis is sold for personal use.