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UK - Law change needed for 'legal highs', say councils

edgarshade

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Aug 31, 2010
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BBC News

13 September 2014

A change in UK law is needed in order to stop "legal highs" being sold in shops, councils have said. The Local Government Association (LGA) - which represents 400 councils - wants the government to adopt a similar approach to that taken in Ireland. Instead of banning drugs on a case-by-case basis, Ireland has banned all "psychoactive" - brain altering - drugs and then exempted some such as alcohol. The LGA says this is the only way to protect young people.

Deaths from so-called legal highs have more than doubled in the past four years - from 26 in 2009 to 60 last year. Currently in the UK a decision on whether a product is allowed to be sold is made on a case-by-case basis. The LGA says that when one product is banned the makers change the chemical compound slightly and can then sell it legally in shops - dubbed "headshops".

To stop this happening in Ireland a ban on all brain-altering drugs was made law in 2010, and then goods like alcohol and tobacco were made exempt and allowed to be sold. Councillor Ann Lucas, chairman of the LGA's safer and stronger communities board, said: "This is all about tackling the sellers. Legal high shops are becoming endemic to our high streets, which is why we are calling on the government to introduce robust and vigorous new laws to tackle them. The sooner we put these so-called "headshops" out of business for good, the better. A key priority is educating and informing younger people about the dangers and risks of these drugs and councils play a pivotal role in this."

Councils spend about 30% - £830 million a year - of their public health budget on drug and alcohol misuse, the LGA said. Legal highs, which usually have names like "Clockwork Orange", "Bliss" and "Mary Jane", have been directly linked to emergency hospital admissions including in mental health services, the LGA said. Drug treatment charity Addaction said it was "notoriously difficult" to control legal highs because so much of their trade took place online. "Any regulatory measures must be accompanied by education, support, advice and - in serious cases - specialist treatment," the charity added.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-29176190
 
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