Council Supports Swift Response to Legal Highs
Council Supports Swift Response to Legal Highs
11 MARCH 2014
For Immediate Release
Hamilton City Council’s
Psychoactive Substances Policy, which was adopted by Council
on 27 February 2014, will be enforced by the Ministry of
Health.
Mayor Julie Hardaker says she is pleased the Government has responded to the needs and concerns of our community and congratulated the Ministry of Health for taking immediate action.
The Council’s policy identified the Central City as the preferred location from which legal highs could be sold with a number of sensitive sites identified.
The Ministry of Health, based on council’s policy, will suspend those temporary licences issued for 21 days.
Hamilton Mayor Julie Hardaker says “Hamilton is a city for families and it’s not OK to have people smoking a drug on the street in full view of children.”
“As a council, we have been virtually powerless to deal with the damage legal highs have caused our community and we are all grateful that the Ministry will now take action” added Mayor Hardaker.
Ms Hardaker said Cr Angela O’Leary, the Chair of the Strategy and Policy Committee had led the Council through the policy process and the news today that the policy will be enforced was a reflection of her hard work on this issue.
Hamilton’s electorate MPs Tim Macindoe and David Bennett both welcomed the news that the Ministry of Health is giving effect to the council’s policy.
“We understand the frustrations people have been experiencing around the damage legal highs have caused our local community, and we have been advocating strongly in Wellington and locally for the Ministry of Health to take immediate action to implement Hamilton City Council’s Psychoactive Substances Policy.
BACKGROUND
Key
facts
• Hamilton City Council’s
Psychoactive Substances Policy identifies the central city
for where legal high retailers can be located.
•
There are currently eight interim licence holders in our
city, five of which are located within the Central City.
Under Council’s policy and under the conditions of each
interim licence, all of these licences are non-compliant.
The Ministry of Health is now giving effect to our
policy.
• Taking into consideration
the sensitive site buffer zones (retailers need to be at
least 100m from a sensitive site), the policy only leaves
areas on the outskirts of the Central City for legal high
retailers to be located.
• Our understanding is
no full licences will be issued by the Ministry of Health
until regulations are finalised which we understand will be
no later than mid-2015.
• Sensitive sites
include:
o any library, museum, community hall or
recreational facility,
o any place of worship, school,
kindergarten, childcare centre or educational
institution,
o any premise occupied by a social welfare
agency such as Work and Income or similar agency,
o
Civic Square, Garden Place, the Hamilton High/District
Court, Embassy Park and the Transport Centre,
o the
Waikato river, the river walkway, pharmacies medical
centres, key bus stops and stand-alone public
toilets.
• Other actions the Council resolved
to do included:
o submit on the Psychoactive Substances
Regulations in support of enabling area prohibition of
Psychoactive Substance sales;
o establish a working
group to consider alternative options available to
supplement Council's Psychoactive Substances Policy
including the issue of the management of anti-social
behaviour in public places and taking into account the
Central City Transformation Plan. This will include
consideration of both a bylaw and changes to the District
Plan.