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News (Media Awareness Project) - Ireland: Column: New Strategy A Bold Effort To Tackle Drugs
Title:Ireland: Column: New Strategy A Bold Effort To Tackle Drugs
Published On:2001-05-12
Source:Irish Times, The (Ireland)
Fetched On:2008-01-26 15:51:53
NEW STRATEGY A BOLD EFFORT TO TACKLE DRUGS PROBLEM

ANDREWS ON SATURDAY: On Thursday morning Eoin Ryan launched his
National Drug Strategy. It is the most far-reaching and radical
attempt ever taken in this State to tackle drug abuse. Few policies
can have been more timely or necessary.

A couple of months ago I wrote here about the extent to which we have
an absurd cultural tolerance of certain types of drug abuse. This is
a country were inebriation and social interaction go hand in hand.
This is a country where the social success of a get-together is
sometimes gauged by the alcoholic consumption of the attendance. I do
not wish to sound entirely joyless. I do take a drink myself and
rather enjoy it.

As a nation, we accept, condone and even glorify alcohol abuse. We
accept that the disease of alcoholism is pitiable and deserving of
treatment. We accept that alcoholics deserve every assistance in
their recovery from an awful illness.

Tragically, however, we do not extend the same degree of humanity and
understanding to those with an addiction to illegal drugs. When the
heroin epidemic first gripped Dublin in the early 1980s our response
was lethargic. Today local groups continue in their opposition to the
establishment of drugs rehabilitation centres in their neighbourhoods.

There is an urgent need to cease our ambivalence now and start
getting to grips with the problem of drug abuse. It is causing havoc
to individuals, families and communities all over the country. Eoin
Ryan's strategy will hopefully greatly reduce its effects.

Since becoming Minister of State responsible for the National Drugs
Strategy, Eoin Ryan has been most effective in advancing a
partnership approach with the communities most affected by heroin
addiction and its effects through the local Drugs Task Forces. His
new strategy builds on this approach.

It emerges from a comprehensive review of existing drugs policy and
includes an extensive nationwide public consultation process. It is
based again upon this partnership approach, taking on board the
expertise and experience of those immediately concerned with the
treatment and prevention of drug abuse.

It is a radical strategy for a number of reasons. It sets out clear
and precise policy targets in the areas of drug supply, reeducation,
prevention, treatment and research; it bring together all elements of
drugs policy into a single framework; it sets out the clear
responsibilities the different Departments have in dealing with drugs
policy; it designates a series of 100 actions which Government
Departments and agencies must carry out in the short, medium and long
term; it sets out specific performance indicators.

For example, in the area of treatment the strategy sets out seven
clear indicators These include the provision of immediate access for
drug-abusers to professional assessment and counselling by health
board services, followed by start of treatment within a month of
assessment; the increase of treatment places to 6,000 by the end of
this year and to a minimum of 6,500 by the end of 2002; and the
provision of training and employment opportunities to stabilise
drug-abusers.

One of the key recommendations in this new strategy is that regional
drugs task forces be set up throughout the country to develop
policies which can cater to the specific needs of that region.

While heroin abuse remains most prominent in Dublin, drug abuse is
occurring throughout the island. These task forces will focus on
identifying and addressing the gaps in services provided to
communities and individual affected by drug abuse.

To make sure the strategy is implemented, the Taoiseach has made Mr
Ryan responsible for co-ordinating the strategy. He will chair an
interdepartmental group on drugs charged with bringing six-monthly
progress reports on the implementation of the strategy to the Cabinet
Committee on Social Inclusion, which is chaired by the Taoiseach. In
addition, an independent evaluation of the strategy will take place
in 2004 to allow the strategy to be effectively established.

This strategy does not exist in a policy vacuum. Attempts to combat
drug abuse occur within the wider framework of social inclusion
policy. In order to tackle our heroin problem we have to tackle once
and for all the problem of urban deprivation which exists in every
single area where illicit drug addiction is a serious problem. In
every one of these areas early school-leaving and the resulting
poverty cycle have exacerbated the heroin problem.

The RAPID programme, an effort to fast-track projects under the
National Development Plan, is focusing on the 25 disadvantaged areas,
aiming to improve health, education, housing, childcare, community
facilities and policing. In addition, the NDP is aiming pounds 15
billion specifically at social inclusion measures.

Building on these policies, Mr Ryan's strategy is a bold and
ambitious attempt to grapple with the harm caused by drug misuse in
Ireland. To gauge just how radical this policy is, the following
exercise may perhaps prove useful.

Obtain a copy of the National Drugs Strategy 2001-2008 from the
Department of Tourism, Sport and Recreation and compare it with the
dearth of specifics and the preponderance of generalisations in
conventional policy papers and it will quickly bring home to the
reader just how refreshing this drugs strategy is. The main elements
should be implemented urgently.
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