poledriver
Bluelighter
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Pill testing gets green light for Canberra festival Spilt Milk
Canberra's Spilt Milk music festival will be the first in Australia to offer pill testing, after the ACT government earlier this year rejected a drug-checking trial at Groovin The Moo.
ACT health minister Meegan Fitzharris on Friday revealed the territory government had given permission to the Safety Testing and Advisory Service at Festivals and Events (STA-Safe) to test illicit drugs at the November 25 festival "to keep people safe".
"We need to find the right balance between letting young people know it's illegal to take drugs, they can be very harmful, but also being realistic because we've seen deaths at festivals, five in 2015 alone, so if that helps to keep people safe, it's worth doing," Ms Fitzharris said.
"This will be the first time we've had something like this in a festival in Australia."
Led by Harm Reduction Australia, the Australian Drug Observatory, Noffs Foundation, DanceWize and Students for Sensible Drug Policy, health professionals in the event's medical area will scrape off a small amount of the drug and analyse it.
Punters will be told exactly what the pill contains and have the chance to dump it in an amnesty bin.
The amnesty bins will contain bleach to destroy the discarded drugs.
Regardless of the outcome of the test, festivalgoers will be warned about the health risks of illegal drugs by trained drug counsellors.
Pill testing already occurs at festivals in New Zealand, Europe and South America.
Analysis of drugs at New Zealand festivals last year showed one in five pills was a completely different drug to what the punter thought they'd bought and one in 10 samples had extra ingredients.
In April, a government spokesman said it was unlikely a pill testing trial would happen in Canberra in 2017, after the Groovin The Moo trial was knocked back for not being "well formed" enough.
However a working group has been looking at how the trial would work in Canberra since June.
ACT Policing have been a part of the group since "day one" and supported a harm minimisation approach, Ms Fitzharris said.
Pill testing does not breach any ACT laws and Ms Fitzharris said those analysing the drugs will take precautions not to inadvertently break them.
"We don't need to have a legislative change in order to enable this to happen and there are a couple of features about the proposal that contribute to that, principally that the person testing the actual pill will never be in possession of that pill, the person wanting it tested will put it into the machine, and it will be analysed through the machine," Ms Fitzharris said.
The trial will be closely monitored, with STA-Safe to report back on the number of people who used the service, how many people discarded their drugs and the chemical content of each sample.
The move will be welcomed by the ACT Greens, who last week tabled a 1000-signature petition in the Legislative Assembly calling on the government to allow pill testing at the festival.
However the Canberra Liberals are likely to continue their staunch opposition to the idea.
Legal affairs' spokesman Jeremy Hanson said a pill testing trial would "encourage drug use".
http://www.smh.com.au/national/heal...erra-festival-spilt-milk-20170921-gylpbe.html
Canberra's Spilt Milk music festival will be the first in Australia to offer pill testing, after the ACT government earlier this year rejected a drug-checking trial at Groovin The Moo.
ACT health minister Meegan Fitzharris on Friday revealed the territory government had given permission to the Safety Testing and Advisory Service at Festivals and Events (STA-Safe) to test illicit drugs at the November 25 festival "to keep people safe".

"We need to find the right balance between letting young people know it's illegal to take drugs, they can be very harmful, but also being realistic because we've seen deaths at festivals, five in 2015 alone, so if that helps to keep people safe, it's worth doing," Ms Fitzharris said.
"This will be the first time we've had something like this in a festival in Australia."
Led by Harm Reduction Australia, the Australian Drug Observatory, Noffs Foundation, DanceWize and Students for Sensible Drug Policy, health professionals in the event's medical area will scrape off a small amount of the drug and analyse it.
Punters will be told exactly what the pill contains and have the chance to dump it in an amnesty bin.
The amnesty bins will contain bleach to destroy the discarded drugs.
Regardless of the outcome of the test, festivalgoers will be warned about the health risks of illegal drugs by trained drug counsellors.
Pill testing already occurs at festivals in New Zealand, Europe and South America.
Analysis of drugs at New Zealand festivals last year showed one in five pills was a completely different drug to what the punter thought they'd bought and one in 10 samples had extra ingredients.
In April, a government spokesman said it was unlikely a pill testing trial would happen in Canberra in 2017, after the Groovin The Moo trial was knocked back for not being "well formed" enough.
However a working group has been looking at how the trial would work in Canberra since June.
ACT Policing have been a part of the group since "day one" and supported a harm minimisation approach, Ms Fitzharris said.
Pill testing does not breach any ACT laws and Ms Fitzharris said those analysing the drugs will take precautions not to inadvertently break them.
"We don't need to have a legislative change in order to enable this to happen and there are a couple of features about the proposal that contribute to that, principally that the person testing the actual pill will never be in possession of that pill, the person wanting it tested will put it into the machine, and it will be analysed through the machine," Ms Fitzharris said.
The trial will be closely monitored, with STA-Safe to report back on the number of people who used the service, how many people discarded their drugs and the chemical content of each sample.
The move will be welcomed by the ACT Greens, who last week tabled a 1000-signature petition in the Legislative Assembly calling on the government to allow pill testing at the festival.
However the Canberra Liberals are likely to continue their staunch opposition to the idea.
Legal affairs' spokesman Jeremy Hanson said a pill testing trial would "encourage drug use".
http://www.smh.com.au/national/heal...erra-festival-spilt-milk-20170921-gylpbe.html