Pubdate: Fri, 06 Aug 1999 Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Author: Peter Clack RUGENDYKE CANNABIS PLAN 'BACKWARD STEP' Attempts to 'recriminalise' cannabis use in Canberra was a backward step that would clog the courts with minor offences, Justice Minister Gary Humphries said last night. He was responding to moves by Independent MLA Dave Rugendyke to repeal seven-year-old laws that provide on-the-spot fines for minor cannabis use. He intends to replace them with harsher penalties, leaving police a cautioning option. Mr Rugendyke warned of serious health risks and evidence of psychotic illness from recreational use of the so-called 'soft drug'. He said the $100 notices were often ignored, and no measures were in place to force offenders to pay their fines. But Mr Rugendyke's proposed Drugs of Dependence Amendment Bill appeared to be in trouble yesterday, ACT Government ministers and Opposition Leader Jon Stanhope combining to dismiss his proposals. Making matters worse, a key report issued this week concluded that tough anti-cannabis laws failed to deter most offenders from using the drug, and could even lead to relationship breakdowns and job losses. The report by the South Australian Drug and Alcohol Service Council and Curtin University's National Centre for Research into Drug Abuse compared Western Australia's prohibitive cannabis laws with the liberal system, similar to the ACT's, used in South Australia. It found the cost of minor cannabis offences under a punitive system could be more damaging than the health effects. Its findings are likely to have a substantial impact on national drug policy talks on cannabis laws. ACT Health Minister Michael Moore - who tabled the original legislation as an independent in 1992 - said the current system was having better outcomes than one based on a punitive policing system. Police in Canberra already had the option of laying charges. Mr Moore said he recognised the health risks but believed they were outweighed by other social factors. He is working to establish a safe injecting clinic for heroin users in Civic by Christmas. Mr Humphries said the current laws had been in place for seven years and he believed it was time to review them. 'However, recriminalising personal cannabis use would be a backward step, clogging the court system with minor offences,' he said. 'Cannabis use is illegal and many studies have shown that it can have a far-reaching effect on people's lives. I want to work with Mr Rugendyke to make the system better, and make sure a strong message is sent to potential users that this drug is harmful.' The Member for Monaro, Peter Webb, said Sydney and Canberra people should move to live in his electorate to escape living in 'drug capitals'. 'It appears that Premier [Bob] Carr and Mr Moore are in a race to see which city can introduce the nation's first shooting gallery . . . but this is abhorrent, and Sydney and Canberra will become internationally known as drug havens.' In their rush to relax drug laws the Governments were overlooking the will of the people. 'So many questions remain unanswered,' he said. 'If laws within these centres are going to be bent to allow people to inject illegal drugs, will the same blind eye be turned to people selling and buying illegal drugs?' He asked what businessman or woman would want a shooting gallery next to their businesses or homes. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea