Dunne: next Government will overhaul Misuse of Drugs Act
Thursday, 8 September 2011
Dunne: next Government will overhaul Misuse of Drugs Act
The near 40-year-old Misuse of Drugs Act will be overhauled and replaced and legislation developed to create a new regime for currently unregulated psychoactive substances, Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne said today in delivering the Government’s official response to the Law Commission’s report on the Act.
The Law Commission report, Controlling and Regulating Drugs: a Review of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975, was delivered in May and the Government has since been considering its findings and recommendations.
In tabling the Government’s response in Parliament today, Mr Dunne said that along with a fundamental overhaul of the Misuse of Drugs Act it was “clearly unacceptable that psychoactive substances can be sold without regulatory controls or any assessment of their potential harm”.
The Government has already taken all synthetic cannabinoids such as Kronic off the market through temporary class drug notices, and will deliver a permanent legislative solution next year, he said.
“The legislation we will bring in will reverse the onus of proof so anyone wishing to sell these products would need to prove they are safe,” he said.
Mr Dunne said that as well as wider legislation to replace the existing Misuse of Drugs Act, further policy work was still required on a number of the Law Commission’s 144 recommendations before detailed legislative proposals would be presented to Parliament.
“These are big issues; they are complex and have consequences and a long term impact and that impact actually plays out in peoples’ lives with issues like drugs, so it is important that we take the time to get it right and do not rush things,” he said.
“It is clear to the Government that the Misuse of Drugs Act needs updating and we are in agreement with the Law Commission on that.
“The current Act was developed nearly 40 years ago at a time when drugs and their use were very different than they are today and the argument for a substantive update is clear and compelling
Mr Dunne said it is unlikely that all the Law Commission’s recommendations would find their way into Government policy or law.
“Officials are evaluating all the recommendations and will advise the next government on how best to incorporate some of the key into a new Act to be considered by the incoming Parliament,” he said.
Among the more controversial Law Commission recommendations in its May report was that clinical trials be conducted into the medical use of leaf cannabis.
“We are not going with that recommendation. It is the Government’s view that is not its role to initiate clinical trials on cannabis leaf or any other product or substance.
“If the active ingredient of cannabis is seen as essential or beneficial for pain relief there are already pharmaceutical forms of it available that provide measured doses and quality control,” he said.
Mr Dunne said that the Law Commission’s recommendations that specialist drug courts be established was being progressed separately by Justice Minister Simon Power
The regulatory impact statement
can be found at
http://www.health.govt.nz/about-ministry/legislation-and-regulation/regulatory-impact-statements
and at
http://www.treasury.govt.nz/publications/informationreleases/ris
Questions and Answers:
What is the
current system for drug control?
The Misuse of
Drugs Act 1975 is the legislative mechanism for banning or
restricting harmful drugs. The Act lists controlled drugs
in three schedules (Class A, B, or C – in terms of the
degree of harm) and these drugs are prohibited unless
expressly authorised for legitimate use. The Act also
schedules precursor substances (substances which are used in
the manufacture of controlled drugs) which may not be
imported or exported without reasonable excuse.
Other
features of the Act include: the presumption for supply of
controlled drugs for possession over a certain amount, the
banning of drug utensils (except for needles and syringes
obtained through an authorised provider), and defining
substances with similar chemical structure (analogues) as
Class C drugs.
An amendment to the Act in 2005
established a restricted substances regime. Restricted
substances are substances which have a low risk of harm.
They are may be legally sold but, like alcohol and tobacco,
have restrictions placed around their marketing and
availability. There are no restricted substances currently
scheduled.
Why create a separate regime for
psychoactive substances alongside the Misuse of Drugs
Act?
Unlike the system in place for foods,
alcohol, medicines and hazardous substances, there is no
legislative mechanism to control psychoactive substances
before they reach the market. Currently the Government must
identify that a substance is being sold and collate a
significant amount of information on the substance before
being able to place any restrictions on it. The Government
has introduced interim measures to respond with urgency to
substances such as the cannabinomimetic products. This has
provided for potentially harmful products to be removed from
the market. However the new regime will provide an enduring
mechanism to prevent any psychoactive substance from
entering the legal market unless it has been rigorously
assessed and demonstrated not to pose an undue risk to the
consumer.
What is the background to the Law
Commission’s involvement in this issue?
In
July 2007, the Government invited the Law Commission to
review the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975.
The Law Commission
carried out a first principles review with a mandate to make
proposals for a new legislative regime consistent with New
Zealand’s international obligations under the United
Nations drug conventions and taking account of a range of
issues and concerns about the Act.
Concerns
included:
o the need to rationalise and consolidate the
three different parts of the Act and for it to be consistent
with other legislation,
o to ensure that penalties under
the act were proportionate,
o to review the affirmative
resolution procedure for scheduling controlled drugs,
o the need for a review of the criteria for
classification of substances,
o the constitutionality of
the presumption for supply provisions,
o concerns that
sponsors of new psychoactive substances were not required to
establish the safety of such products before they could be
legally sold.
In February last year, the Law Commission
published an Issues Paper providing a detailed discussion of
the problems with the current legislation and proposing
options to address these problems. The Law Commission
conducted targeted and public consultation and received 3800
submissions on the Issues Paper. On 3 May this year, the
final report of the Law Commission was tabled in the House.
What matters are still under
consideration?
The following issues will be
analysed before proposals for a new Misuse of Drugs Act are
put forward:
a) Classification of controlled drugs
including recommendations relating to establishing a new
expert committee, abolishing the current sub-schedules in
the “ABC” system, developing new schedules for precursor
substances, and abolishing the Order in Council provision.
b) Offences and penalties including possession
and supply provisions.
c) Interaction with other
legislation including the Medicines Act 1981, ministerial
powers, and regulations made under the Misuse of Drugs
Act.
What mechanisms are currently available
for dealing with new psychoactive
substances?
The current mechanisms for dealing
with these substances are:
a) The Smoke-free
Environments Act 1990 prohibits the sale of herbal smoking
products, such as herbal products containing synthetic
cannabinomimetic substances, to people aged under 18.
b)
The analogue provisions of the Act state that substances
which are structurally similar to controlled drugs are
analogues of these drugs and automatically classified as
Class C controlled drugs by default.
c) If the
Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs assesses a substance as
having a moderate or higher level of harm then it can be
prohibited as a controlled drug.
d) If the Expert
Advisory Committee on Drugs assesses a substance as having a
low risk of harm it can be restricted under the Misuse of
Drugs Amendment Act 2005 as a restricted substance.
e)
The temporary class drug notices introduced by the Misuse of
Drugs Amendment Act 2011 provide a mechanism for prohibiting
the importation, manufacture, sale and supply of substances
listed by a notice in the Gazette. Sixteen synthetic
cannabinomimetic substances have been listed since the
provision came into effect in August 2011.
Why have the existing tools for dealing with
uncontrolled psychoactive substances not provided an
adequate response to the market for “legal
highs”?
Over the last ten years, there has
been a burgeoning market in “legal highs” which are
psychoactive substances not scheduled as controlled drugs in
the Act.
The Law Commission raised concerns about the
reactive nature of drug control in that new psychoactive
substances can be manufactured, imported and sold with
minimal restriction until they are proven to be harmful and
classified as prohibited drugs or scheduled as restricted
substances.
There is a delay from identifying a new substance, acquiring and collating evidence of harm and finally scheduling drugs under the Act. The Law Commission considered that in this period potentially harmful substances could be marketed and sold.
The Law Commission identifies two inter-related problems with the status quo. Firstly, potentially harmful psychoactive substances are available with little or no control over their ingredients, dose, place of sale and purchase age. Secondly, the onus is on the Government to identify that these substances are available, and then to determine whether they are harmful before placing restrictions upon them.
Will
the new regime involve legislation separate to the Misuse of
Drugs Act?
The legislative details of the new
regime are yet to be worked through. It is likely that the
new regime will be enacted as either an amendment to the
Misuse of Drugs Act 1975 or as stand alone legislation.
What is happening about drug
courts?
Justice Minister Simon Power is working
on this issue separately.
ENDS