Pubdate: Fri, 17 Dec 1999 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Author: Nicole Strahan LOCALS FIGHT INJECTING ROOM TRIALS AT the Collingwood Town Hall this week, a group of residents and traders gathered in search of answers. The people were members of a community battered by the scourge of drugs and wanting solutions to a problem they face nearly every day in their streets, laneways and shops. But, as they told a panel of experts on safe-injecting facilities, they fear the state Government's policy to trial a shooting gallery in the City of Yarra could cause more problems than it solves. "We have had more than our fair share of drug dealing and crime in and around Collingwood and Fitzroy and we don't want our community singled out as some sort of social laboratory," Fitzroy resident John Jennings told the meeting. Now, as Premier Steve Bracks faces increasing pressure from Prime Minister John Howard to abandon safe-injecting room trials, it appears he may also be facing a community backlash in Melbourne's heroin hot-spots. Debates such as the one at Collingwood Town Hall are now raging in the other four cities -- Port Phillip, Melbourne, Yarra and Maribyrnong -- earmarked for safe injecting facilities. And community concern is only likely to build, said youth outreach service Open Family chief executive Nathan Stirling. He believes the state Government should be preparing to retreat from its policy of only establishing safe injecting facilities with the support of local governments. "I would not be putting my money on all designated local government areas approving these injecting facilities," he said. "Local governments are extremely sensitive to resident and trader concerns ... and it may well be that these local governments will not endorse them and then the state Government is in a tricky position on what they do next. "I think the state Government would have to have the right of veto but hopefully they would have the right process so they could bring the local community along with them." Smith Street Traders Network secretary Myrto Aretakis points to a lack of regard for the plight of traders trying to make a living for the growing community alarm. "How then will a safe-injecting facility, while taking the users out of back lanes, minimise the harm to our potential customers and legal trade we want to conduct in Smith Street?" she asked the Collingwood Town Hall meeting. In Port Phillip, where the council has strongly supported a safe-injecting facility for the area, disquiet is also brewing among retailers. "We will take our fair share of the solution but there is a new level of concern and that is that other groups will become more strident in their opposition and we will be the only place," Fitzroy Street Traders Association secretary Rosemary Tovey said. Port Phillip Mayor Dick Gross, who has been appointed to the Government's Drug Policy Expert Committee, headed by David Penington, has been a strong advocate for injecting rooms. However, he said the council would not accept St Kilda becoming the only location for safe-injecting facilities. "We don't want to have the honey pot effect and we want other communities to come to the same realisation," he said. "Clearly there is a responsibility of the local municipality to make sure they are not isolated and alone." In the CBD area, the issue has prompted a resurgence of the group Residents 3000 after three years of inaction. The proposal of Wesley Central Mission to open a safe-injecting facility from its Lonsdale Street site has hit a particularly sensitive nerve. It is understood Wesley has spent $400,000 preparing its venue for a trial safe-injecting facility and hoped to open next year. The project is now on hold. Residents 3000 secretary Peter Faris QC said inner-city people felt excluded from the debate. "Why is that we want to legitimise a heroin industry in the CBD?," he said. "I cannot understand what our city fathers are on about." The City of Melbourne last week deferred a decision until after the Penington committee released its report next year. The Greater Dandenong Council has also sensed a growing backlash, particularly among traders. Mayor Naim Melhem concedes the majority of his community is against the plan but he is hopeful the mood will change. At Maribyrnong, the council is yet to determine its position. Mayor Bill Horrocks said he was acutely aware residents and traders were struggling to come to grips with a wide range of issues, from where a facility should be located to how drug trafficking would be controlled. "The interesting thing from our perspective is we are the only site on the west side of the city, and that is of concern to us and something we need to look at," he said. Drug-Arm Victoria associate director Warwick Murphy said if a community such as Yarra, which was once a mecca for drug users, was not united in support of safe-injecting trials there was little hope the wider population would support them. "I think the more they try to push it and the community says it does not want it, the community will rise up against it," he said. "If the Labor Party thinks this is a fait accompli, I think they may be misunderstanding and underestimating people." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D