Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jul 1999 Source: Illawarra Mercury (Australia) Copyright: Illawarra Newspapers Contact: http://mercury.illnews.com.au/ Author: Louise Turk REGION TRIALS NEW DRUG PLAN First-time offenders caught with small amounts of illicit drugs could be cautioned and counselled under a new program being trialled in the Illawarra, NSW Health Minister Craig Knowles said yesterday. Mr Knowles said the Illawarra was one of two places in the state which would test the scheme, aimed at intervening before drug users became entangled in the legal system. The pilot program would only be available to people who have no prior convictions for drug offences, violence or sexual assault. Under the scheme, police have the discretion to caution offenders and send them to a compulsory assessment and treatment program. "Young people get hooked quickly and they tend to start off with small amounts," Mr Knowles said. "The traditional solution is to take them down to the cop shop and put them through the legal processes. "But the result is, and we know this only too well from statistics, is that is one way to get on the slippery slide of bigger addictions. By requiring them to undergo treatment we remove them away from the slippery slide and back into a mainstream lifestyle." Mr Knowles announced the new program in Wollongong yesterday, as part of the Government's $158 million response to the May Drug Summit. "These are major and substantial efforts in the attack on drugs statewide," he said. "They are trials and we will scrap the trials if they are not successful." Speaking at the Drug, Alcohol and HIV/AIDS Service in Rawson St, Mr Knowles said the Government would also fund mobile community outreach teams in northern Illawarra and the Shoalhaven. "There will be more intensive initial treatment and assessment of inmates with drug problems by setting up treatment services in police cells at Wollongong," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D