NSW Labor Premier Chris Minns聽has been reverting back聽to the聽drug reform rhetoric聽the former Coalition government had been using over the summer of聽2018-鈥019聽when five people died in drug-related circumstances at festivals.
These deaths led to an聽听补苍诲听.聽Minns鈥 response had聽been causing a stir,聽not just because the Uniting Church and聽some 聽have been聽calling for the decriminalisation of personal drug use聽since 2018, but also because NSW Labor聽had promised drug law reform as part of its election platform.
But drug reform campaigners applauded Minns鈥 new depenalisation scheme, announced 9, which involves fining rather than criminlaising those found in possession of a personal amount of an illicit drug. The system means the person can be fined up to two times, before they are charged.聽
Uniting NSW.ACT pointed out that this means there is now a 鈥渂ipartisan approach to drug laws鈥 as Minns鈥 strategy was first proposed by聽then聽Coalition Attorney General Mark Speakman聽.
Resuscitated reform
尝补产辞谤鈥檚 states that NSW Police will be able to issue up to two $400聽 found in possession of a personal quantity of an illicit substance.
鈥淭he scheme will encourage people who get a criminal infringement notice to complete a tailored drug and alcohol intervention and, if they do complete it, then their fine will be treated as though it was paid,鈥 Labor said, adding that聽if they fail the program, the fine stands.
罢丑别听, introduced into parliament the same day, contains the changes. A new section, 23B聽inserted into the聽Fines Act 1996, will permit the 鈥渃ompletion of certain activities鈥 to be 鈥渢reated as payment鈥.
尝补产辞谤鈥檚 announcement said the former Dominic Perrottet government asked police and the department of health to consider this scheme. But it did not state that when Speakman first put it to the Berejiklian cabinet, it contained聽 prior to any fines being issued.
The NSW ice inquiry first raised the on-the-spot fining scheme as an alternative to drug decriminalisation: it was its main recommendation for drug law reform.
The state coroner also recommended decriminalisation in its coronial inquest into music festival deaths.
Decriminalisation involves the removal of criminal penalties for the possession of a quantity of an illicit substance that is deemed to be for personal use.
However, under the Minns-Speakman depenalisation scheme,聽聽and its use remain criminal acts that would be initially punished via a fine, unless a treatment program is completed.
Head in the sand
Former Premier Gladys Berejiklian commissioned Professor Daniel Howard to conduct the ice inquiry in November 2018, months after two young people had died at that year鈥檚 September 15 Defqon.1 festival and drug law reform was being widely discussed.
In July, Minns pushed his聽promise of a聽NSW drug law reform summit back a couple of years, saying he had 鈥渘o mandate鈥 to follow the ACT Labor-Greens government on drug decriminalisation. Such laws had on August聽28.
Drug law reform group on聽September聽11 to consider pill testing, a system that lets people check the content of their illegal drugs so they can then make an informed decision on whether they still want to take them. Pill Testing Australia has been operating a fixed-site drug checking service in the ACT since mid-last year.
However, just聽like Berejiklian, Minns has continued聽to rule out pill testing, despite it having saved lives in Europe since the mid-1990s. He鈥檚 borrowed the Coalition鈥檚 favoured phrase saying that harm reduction intervention is 鈥渘o silver bullet鈥.
But then聽following all this, on September 30, two young men died at the Sydney Knockout music festival in drug-related circumstances.聽
Discretionary issues
NSW has been operating the cannabis cautioning scheme聽: it gives police the option of issuing warnings to adults found in possession of a personal amount. However, over 2020-2021,聽police made more than聽聽in NSW: around 90% were consumer offences.
In response to the festival deaths over 2018鈥2019,聽since January 25, 2019,聽police have had the discretion to issue fines instead of pressing charges for any individual found in possession of a certain quantity of illicit substances.
Instead of charging someone with personal possession, officers聽聽to issue an on-the-spot $400 fine for a small quantity of MDMA, 0.25 grams, in capsule form, or a trafficable quantity, 0.75 grams, in any other form, as well as聽聽of any other illegal substance.
Despite officers having this discretion,聽聽to 2017, police pursued 80% of First Nations people in possession of聽a cautionable amount of cannabis through the courts, while only 50% of non-Indigenous people were treated in the same way.
鈥淭he NSW government has today announced its intention to extend the existing infringement notice system that currently applies to MDMA at music festivals to apply to all drugs and all places,鈥 Uniting NSW.ACT general manager of advocacy and external relations Emma Maiden said on October 10.
鈥淭his is a good step forward, but the proposed imposition of a large $400 fine is clearly most damaging to those who can least afford it.
鈥淭he proposed reform plan for these fines to be discharged by being referred for a health intervention is a recognition of what we have long been saying,鈥 Maiden said. 鈥淒rug use and dependency is a health issue and should be treated as such.鈥
[Paul Gregoire writes for Sydney Criminal Lawyers, where this was .]