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PRESS RELEASE - 1st September 2003
Edition
4.
Cannabis News Items From Around the World
Harm Reduction Film Festival looking for entries!
Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2003 13:47:54 +1000
Roll up, roll up, this is your chance to be a part of the 15th
International Conference on the Reduction of Drug Related Harm
Film Festival! If you or your colleagues have been involved (directly
or indirectly) in the production of a harm reduction-related film,
be it a documentary, training video, etc etc this innovative stream
will provide a stage for you to present your work. We are now
calling for submissions. All films will be considered! There will
be two screening formats.
1. Symposium: symposiums offer the opportunity for someone who
has been involved (directly or indirectly) in the making of a
film to introduce and discuss their film. Films must be no longer
than 30 minutes in duration and must be accompanied by a presenter.
2. Film lounge screening: the idea of the film lounge is to screen
films that are unaccompanied by the flim makers and longer films
that don't fit the format of the symposium sessions. All films
must be in: · English or have English subtitles · DVD, VCD, Video
(DHS or PAL) or CD-Rom format All submissions will be subject
to review by a panel and are not guaranteed to be screened. Film
submissions close 30th November 2003.
Click here to
email for further information
EMERY PUSHES POT-STIRRING HABIT
Marc Emery rubs some people the wrong way. And that's precisely
his intention. Yesterday afternoon, Emery showed up on the front
steps of London police department headquarters and lit a marijuana
cigarette -- or in his words, a "giant bomber" -- that he then
passed among about 75 onlookers.
Rub.
As others fired up joints and pipes and pot smoke swirled toward
police headquarters, Emery claimed that smoking pot is not only
legal, but morally and ethically right. "Marijuana does not impair,"
he told the crowd. "Marijuana enhances!"
Rub rub rub.
Emery was here as part of his self-described Summer of Legalization
cross-country tour, which has included stops in Winnipeg, Regina
and Calgary. Today, he heads to Hamilton. On Saturday, the former
owner of the City Lights Book Shop (he left London 11 years ago)
plans to speak at Queen's Park in Toronto.
Emery's tour revolves around a recent Ontario Court of Appeal
decision, which ruled against overturning a precedent-setting
Ontario Superior Court decision that cleared a teenager of marijuana
possession charges. The Superior Court judge ruled there is no
current ban on possessing pot in Ontario, because the federal
government failed to comply with a July 2000 court order to create
a new law dealing with the drug.
Under proposed new federal laws, possession of up to 15 grams
of pot - -- enough for about 20 joints -- would be a minor offence
carrying no criminal record. Police forces in Ontario have said
they won't lay charges for possession of less than 30 grams of
pot until the laws are clarified.
Yesterday, I didn't see a single police officer emerge from the
headquarter's front door during the 90-minute demonstration. But
though he wasn't charged by London police (he has been charged
in six other cities), Emery insists damage is still being done.
"Even though there was no marijuana law in effect in 2002, we
had over 50,000 charges laid (in Canada)," said the fast-talking
activist during an interview before the Dundas Street demonstration.
"And that's staggering. There's no other civil rights violation
as massive."
Emery says about two million Canadians have been charged with
cannabis-related offences in the last 35 years, and that this
so-called "pogrom" has harmed countless Canadians.
"When we incarcerate people for marijuana and take a person away
from their family, we're doing incalculable harm," he said. "We
spend billions of dollars and we give police incredible authoritarian
power . . . causing a generation or two to never trust the police.
"Where does Canada benefit by any of these laws relating to marijuana?"
he asked. "We don't. There's no benefit."
But isn't Emery just a selfish pothead who wants nothing more
than to get stoned?
"Even if I'm some hedonistic pothead, I shouldn't have to suffer
jail," said Emery. "And even if that were true, it doesn't validate
the fact that the majority of Canadians who don't smoke marijuana
are responsible and explicitly supportive of our oppression."
Rub, rub, rub.
Emery argues legalizing marijuana would bring the government
more tax revenue and put criminal traffickers out of business.
And because of his crusade, some call Emery a civil-rights crusader.
I see him as a guy who's dedicated his life to rubbing our faces
in things we'd rather ignore.
When he was 20 years old, Emery had a vasectomy because he didn't
think he could devote enough time to properly raising children.
(Rub.)
In 1984, he helped found the Freedom Party of Ontario, but left
in 1990 because he said Canada would be better off without any
government. (Rub.) In 1991, he protested a London city bylaw prohibiting
sidewalk signs. (Rub.) He condemned the public school system as
"prisons for children" and taught his stepchildren -- now in their
20s -- at home. (Rub.)
In 1992, he tried (unsuccessfully) to get arrested for selling
literature about marijuana. The same year, as part of his attempts
to overturn Canada's obscenity laws, Emery was convicted of selling
banned copies of an album by the rap group 2 Live Crew. (Emery
received a conditional discharge and 12 months probation.)
And yet yesterday, the 45-year-old rabble-rouser admitted he
earns $300,000 a year from his Vancouver-based mail-order marijuana
seed business -- and pays $144,000 in annual taxes on that declared
income.
"But you know what?" he said. "I'm grateful to pay (the taxes).
You're talking to a guy who's had his money used against him in
five raids, 13 jailings and 17 arrests.
"And I still believe Canada is the greatest place on earth."
Rub, rub, rub.
California brings case against Cannabis
prescribing Psychiatrist!
Mikuriya To Med Board: No Deal
Author: Fred Gardner
Source: Anderson Valley Advertiser
Pubdate: Wednesday, August 27, 2003
Tod Mikuriya, MD, has rejected a final settlement offer from
the Medical
Board of California. The deal would have meant four years probation;
taking classes on ethics, record-keeping, and other areas in which
the Berkeley psychiatrist is supposedly deficient; and a $10,000 fine.
The Board claims that its investigation of Mikuriya has cost more
than
$100,000 -an amount for which he now could be found liable.
So, starting on Sept. 3, the courtroom of Administrative Law
Judge
Jonathan Lew in Oakland's State Building (1515 Clay St.) will
be the scene
of a file-by-file review of Mikuriya's handling of 17 cases.
Just as the federal government used unwilling jurors to convict
Ed
Rosenthal in his infamous cultivation case, the state of California
is
using unwilling patients to prosecute Mikuriya for "unprofessional
conduct." Not one of the 17 patients who allegedly received
sub-standard
care has filed or expressed a complaint against Mikuriya. Not
one has
reported adverse effects from the treatment he approved. In fact,
almost
all the patients in whose name the Board is bringing this case
express
gratitude and describe Mikuriya as an attentive, empathetic interviewer.
All had been self-medicating with cannabis before consulting him.
Many
report that Mikuriya was the first and only doctor with whom they
could
discuss the fact that they'd been using marijuana to cope with
various
problems.
There is an Alice-in-Wonderland quality to the Mikuriya prosecution.
A
psychiatrist who elicits from his patients the most honest medical
history
they've ever given stands to lose his license for conducting inadequate
exams!
Although all the complaints come from law enforcers who resented
Mikuriya's support for marijuana users, the Medical Board insists
that
their case has nothing to do with marijuana -as if Mikuriya would
now
stand accused if he were a well known proponent of, say, Ritalin!
Mikuriya is charged with violating a "standard of care"
that the Medical
Board has never defined with respect to doctors who approve their
patients' cannabis use. To add to the irony, for years Mikuriya
has been
urging the Board to adopt specific standards with respect to cannabis
approvals, while the Board insists that such approvals are equivalent
to
prescriptions for "dangerous drugs."
Key questions in the court of common sense -How safe is cannabis?
Is it
effective in treating the problems reported by Mikuriya's patients?-
will
be irrelevant at the upcoming hearing if the Board has its way.
A
physician named Tracy Duskin, employed by the Board as an expert
witness,
will testify, having read 17 patients' files (obtained by subpoena),
that
Mikuriya failed each of them in certain ways. The defense will
call its
own expert, Richard Hansen, MD, an East Bay psychiatrist, to explain
why
Mikuriya was able to make a valid medical judgment in each case.
Some of the patients who have been asked to testify on Mikuriya's
behalf
will need rides to Oakland from farflung towns when the defense
begins
(possibly as soon as Friday, Sept. 5). If you're interested in
transporting a friendly witness, please call Mikuriya's assistant,
John
Trapp, at 510-548-1188.
This week Trapp released a list of the complainants, as gleaned
from
documents filed in the case:
Sacramento County Deputy District Attorney Del Oros: Patient
1 Nevada
County Sheriff's Sgt Steve Mason [listed as Commander of the Narcotics
Task Force] Patients 2, 9, 14 Humboldt County Sheriff's Sgt Steve
Knight
patients 3, 6 El Dorado County Narcotics Det. Bob Ashworth, Patients
4, 7,
8 Sacramento County Sheriff's Det Jeff McCannon, Patient 5 District
Attorney's Office Tehama Patients 11, 12 Tehama County Det. Sgt
Dave
Hencraft Patients 13, 15 Anonymous (newspaper clip sent to MBC
Investigator Tom Campbell] 10 Napa County District Attorney's
Office 16
Sonoma Narcotics Task Force 17
All documents relevant to the case (except patients' records,
of course)
can be found on Mikuriya.com, including the final settlement offer
from
the Medical Board that Mikuriya rejected.
Frank Kortangian
One of the patients who'll need a ride to Oakland to testify
for Mikuriya
is a 66-year-old Navy veteran named Frank Kortangian. He and his
wife Lisa
are caretakers of a ranch in Gray Eagle, a small town in Plumas
County.
Before Frank's back went out in the '90s, he used to do landscaping
and
raise vegetables for the farmers' market.
Like many of the patients involved in the Mikuriya case, Frank
Kortangian
had previously crossed swords with local law enforcers. His letters
to the
editor of the local papers had earned him a rep as an environmentalist
and
a medical marijuana advocate. In the winter of '95-'96, Frank
and Lisa
gathered six pages' worth of signatures for Prop 215. They and
others like
them were the reason it passed.
In September '96 Frank and Lisa were arrested for growing seven
plants
- -four on federal land in Sierra County, and three on the property
of a
local land baron. The bust involved "at least 15 officers"
according to
Lisa -Sierra County sheriffs, Forest Service, maybe DEA. "They're
very
bored up here," she commented. The plants were about four
feet high, grown
in the shade, and would have yielded less than half a pound of
usable
marijuana, according to knowledgeable witnesses. The Kortangians
were
charged with cultivation, cultivation for sale, and conspiracy.
Frank had informed his doctor that he used marijuana for chronic
back pain
and arthritis, but the doc, described by Lisa as "a yuppie
type who
doesn't want to rock the boat," refused to testify for him.
Nor would the
Veterans Administration doctors he had consulted. Mikuriya interviewed
Kortangian, reviewed his medical records, and offered to appear
on his
behalf at a preliminary hearing. District Attorney Sue Jackson
objected
that Mikuriya had not been Kortangian's doctor at the time of
the bust,
and Judge William Skillman agreed that Mikuriya should not be
allowed to
testify.
Kortangian's lawyer, Dale Woods of Truckee, was struck by the
level of
support and direction the District Attorney received from the
office of
Attorney General Dan Lungren. "They would send her boilerplate
motions to
file," he told your correspondent. Jackson was quoted in
a local paper,
the Mountain Messenger, questioning Mikuriya's professional
qualifications. "I believe there will be some question about
the man's
license," she said.
Woods urged the Kortangians to accept a plea bargain. Lisa copped
to
misdemeanor possession and got 15 days in jail plus three years'
probation, although the quantity of mj found at the house was
too small to
weigh. "They wouldn't even consider diversion," she
says. Frank got 75
days plus three years probation.
Frank Kortangian wrote the following letter back in March '98
to the judge
who presided over his conviction.
An Open Letter From Frank Kortangian to the Honorable Judge
Skillman
I know this letter is highly irregular but you brought up
some issues in
your courtroom which need to be addressed and as you must know
it is
almost impossible for a defendant to say much in your court.
You mentioned several times your frustration with me and
my co-defendant
not accepting responsibility for our actions. You are wrong about
that. I
have from the very beginning taken full responsibility for the
seven
cannabis plants in question. I think what you really wanted to
say was, I
showed no remorse. On that point you would be correct. I don't
think I
have done anything immoral and if some crime was committed, please
show me
a victim besides Lisa and me. As for Lisa, she is not accepting
responsibility because she is not guilty of anything. People being
prosecuted for crimes they are innocent of seldom show remorse.
You
pontificated on your view of what the voters had in mind when
they enacted
Health and Safety Code 11362.5 (Prop 215) almost to the point
of
practicing medicine from your bench. Actually the new law is quite
simple,
perhaps too simple for great legal minds like yours to grasp.
It was meant
to protect people with serious illness and chronic pain from prosecution
and not the medicine of last resort after all other drugs have
failed, as
is your expressed view.
Cannabis is the most benign drug in a physician's Pharmacopaeia.
If you
would have taken time to read my medical records perhaps you would
not
have been so adamant about not allowing me to use a prop 215 medical
defense. I would have welcomed a chance for a jury trial in which
the
jurors could have heard the whole truth, but apparently you were
afraid to
let me have a fighting chance to keep a felony conviction off
my good
record.
By convicting Lisa and me you have accomplished one thing:
all our many
friends and acquaintances have been repulsed by the lack of justice
in our
legal system and when we explain how your court has refused to
abide by
the law of the land and would not allow a medical defense in spite
of my
doctor's written recommendation, they are flabbergasted. The Superior
Court of Sierra County is a shining example of the ever-widening
chasm
between the people and their government.
If your Honor knew Lisa Branda and what a wonderful, kind
loving person
she is, as many of us do, you would be the one showing shame and
remorse
for forcing her to spend even one minute of her exemplary life
in your
jail.
A quick word about the D.A., a woman who looks at less than
a pound of
medical marijuana, convinces the judge not to allow it to be shown
in
court, and then testifies that it weighed seven pounds. Well all
I can say
about a person of that caliber is that the voters 0f Sierra County
are
indeed fortunate to have a chance to vote for a person with some
sense of
decency in the upcoming elections.
I fully expect some form of government retaliation in response
to this
letter, but I think the people of Sierra County and elsewhere
need to know
how our justice system is being manipulated.
Signed: Frank Kortangian
Kortangian reports that the DA who prosecuted him, Sue Jackson,
was voted
out of office and that the current DA has dismissed a number of
marijuana
cases brought by the local police -in other words, there's been
some
progress in them thar hills. Upon hearing that Mikuriya had recently
undergone heart surgery -a triple bypass- Kortangian proudly expostulated,
"I beat him -mine was quadruple." That's why he could
use a ride.
A comment from attorney Gordon Brownell: "The Kortangian
saga
demonstrates, as if we need reminding, that the roots of the campaign
against Tod were in the Lungren DOJ and the same soldiers in that
effort
have not given up the crusade... The genesis of this prosecution
is found
in the Lungren/McCaffrey cabal that has never let up in their
vindictiveness against Tod. For them to maintain the charade that
their
accusations have nothing to do with recommending marijuana is
ludicrous."
This just in from Dale Schafer, husband of Dr. Marian Fry: "Mollie
was
served with a three-count accusation from the Attorney General
8/22. It is
alleged that she did not do a thorough enough exam and did not
have enough
records before she recommended cannabis. She is the next target.
We will
do our best to fight this. I thought Bill Lockyer was on our side..."
Simultaneously, the AG's office has decided not to pursue the
Medical
Board's flimsy case against Dr. Frank Lucido (another example
of the
patient thriving). The AG seems to be playing bad cop/good cop
with the
medical marijuana movement.
Says Schafer: "What we want from Lockyer is a general amnesty
for doctors
who were recommending cannabis based on its safety profile and
in the
absence of explicit do's and don'ts from the Medical Board. If
the Board
establishes practice standards and doctors violate them, sanctions
would
be appropriate. But to do it ex post facto is extremely unfair."
SANTA CRUZ MEDICAL MARIJUANA CARD PROGRAM LAUNCHED
A Santa Cruz county-operated program to issue identification
cards to medical marijuana
users was launched this week, and backers hope it will ease concerns
of patients and police.
The effort is aimed at helping police identify patients and caregivers
legitimately using marijuana.
County Supervisor Mardi Wormhoudt said the cards mean patients
and caregivers will have less to worry about when they possess
marijuana for medical use.
"People feel very vulnerable," Wormhoudt said. "To
add to that burden to people who are already suffering is adding another layer of difficulty
that shouldn't be there."
Patients are required to offer documentation before obtaining
a card:
*- A photo identification card.
*- Proof of Santa Cruz County residence.
*- An original doctor's recommendation, signed by a physician
licensed in California.
*- $35 in cash, check or money order. The cards are valid for
three years and the program is self-funded.
Three cards were issued this week as sort of a trial run.
"We had some brave souls come forward who helped us work
out the kinks" said Betsy McCarty, county chief of public health.
One of them was Valerie Corral, co-founder of the Wo/Men's Alliance
for Medical Marijuana. The alliance issues cards for its members,
but the county program offers identification for people unable
to be served by the group.
Corral lauded the program for not keeping records of the patient
or doctor after a card is issued, offering protection for doctors
and patients from federal scrutiny. But some medical marijuana
advocates are skeptical of the promise of anonymity.
"There's no way anybody can convince me there's not some
kind of record," said Andrea Tischler of the Compassion Flower
Inn in Santa Cruz.
The county will only keep track of the money taken in and the
number of cards issued and denied, McCarty said.
The program's supporters also say it helps prevent patients from
needless or mistaken police attention.
"This offers an opportunity for any Santa Cruz County resident
to have some immediate protection," Corral said.
The county Sheriff's Office supports the cards. Deputies say
there has been confusion since Proposition 215 passed in 1996.
The voter-approved initiative provided for medical marijuana in
the state.
"We're cops, we're not health-care providers," sheriff's
spokesman Kim Allyn said. "One of the issues (we face) is
who is a bona fide medical marijuana patient. That makes this
piece of identification viable."
McCarty said the cards can be processed within a day, though
that depends on the timelines of the physician responding for
verification.
Appointments for the cards can be made by calling the county
Health Services Agency at 454-3431.
'Narco-Terror' Draft Bill Would Provide
Broader Power,
Ashcroft Defends Patriot Act
By Dean Schabner
Aug. 20 2003
As Attorney General John Ashcroft barnstorms the country to bolster
support for the controversial USA Patriot Act, a new bill is quietly
circulating on Capitol Hill to give even greater powers to law
enforcement — in the name of fighting drug trafficking.
ABCNEWS.com has obtained a draft of the Vital Interdiction of
Criminal Terrorist Organizations Act of 2003, or VICTORY Act,
which could be introduced to Congress this fall, and which appears
to have been prepared by the office of Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah,
the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The measure would give law enforcement increased subpoena powers
and more leeway over wire-tap evidence and on classifying some
drug offenses as terrorism.
The draft is a complex 89-page document that, like the Patriot
Act, the massive anti-terror law that passed overwhelmingly six
weeks after the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, would amend
various existing statutes, ostensibly to allow law enforcement
to work more efficiently.
Provisions in the draft would:
Raise the threshold for rejecting illegal wiretaps. The draft
reads: "A court may not grant a motion to suppress the contents
of a wire or oral communication, or evidence derived therefrom,
unless the court finds that the violation of this chapter involved
bad faith by law enforcement."
Extend subpoena powers by giving giving law enforcement the
authority to issue non-judicial subpoenas which require a person
suspected of involvement in money laundering to turn over financial
records and appear in a prosecutor's office to answer questions.
Extend the power of the attorney general to issue so-called
administrative "sneak-and-peek" subpoenas to drug cases.
These subpoenas allow law enforcement to gather evidence from
wire communication, financial records or other sources before
the subject of the search is notified.
Allow law enforcement to seek a court order to require the "provider
of an electronic communication service or remote computing service"
or a financial institution to delay notifying a customer that
their records had been subpoenaed.
Patriot Challenges
Hatch spokeswoman Margarita Tapia declined to comment directly
on the draft, which begins "Mr. Hatch introduced
the following bill," and is dated for the first session of
the 108th Congress beginning next month. Tapia noted, "We
are examining legislative options but we have not submitted anything
for consideration."
Other members of the Senate judicial committee also declined
to comment on the draft.
And a spokesman for the Justice Department, which came under
fire from several members of Congress when drafts of the Domestic
Security Enhancement Act -"Patriot II"-
appeared earlier this year, said the agency was not involved in
the Victory Act.
"It's not ours," a Justice Department official said.
But critics wasted no time taking aim at the measure. A Democratic
aide for the House Judiciary Committee said the linking of drug-related
crime and terrorism raises questions about the draft.
"This bill would treat drug possession as a 'terrorist offense'
and drug dealers as 'narco-terrorist kingpins,' " the aide
argued. "To say that terrorist groups use a small percentage
of the drug trafficking in the United States to finance terrorism
may be a fair point, but this bill would allow the government
to prosecute most drug cases as terrorism cases."
Concluded the aide: "It really seems to be more about a
political agenda to jail drug users than a serious attempt to
stop terrorists."
American Civil Liberties Union staff attorney Jameel Jaffer added:
"Absolutely nothing would prevent the attorney general from
using these subpoenas to obtain the records of people who have
no connection to terrorism, drug trafficking or crime of any sort."
Patriot Challenges
Recent indications of growing discomfort around the country with
some of the elements of the Patriot Act have come from the Republican
side of the aisle as well.
The House last month passed by a vote of 309-118 a bill to eliminate
funding for the "sneak-and-peek" powers as authorized
in the Patriot Act. The House bill was authored by a Republican,
Rep. Butch Otter of Idaho.
Meanwhile, three states and more than 140 cities, counties and
towns around the country have passed resolutions critical of the
Patriot Act. The language of those resolutions ranges from statements
affirming a commitment to the rights guaranteed in the Constitution,
to directives to local law enforcement not to cooperate with federal
agents involved in investigations deemed to be unconstitutional.
A bill has also been introduced in the House to exclude bookstore
and library records from those that could be subpoenaed by law
enforcement without prior notification of the person whose records
were being seized.
Two lawsuits have also been filed challenging provisions of the
Patriot Act.
The New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights filed suit
in Los Angeles arguing the provision that makes it illegal to
provide "expert advice and assistance" to groups alleged
to have ties to terrorism is unconstitutionally vague.
The ACLU also filed suit in Detroit last month, challenging the
provision that allows law enforcement to secretly subpoena people's
bookstore and library records.
Within the Constitution
Even before Ashcroft took to the road Tuesday, the Justice Department
had begun defending the Patriot Act.
The department recently posted a new Web site www.lifeandliberty.gov,
with questions and answers addressing many of the complaints critics
have about the Patriot Act.
Justice has also suggested the 93 U.S. attorneys around the country
hold town hall meetings to reach out to people in their jurisdictions,
to try to reassure them there is no threat to law abiding people
in the Patriot Act.
Ashcroft began his tour in Washington, D.C., to put out the message
personally that the Patriot Act has greatly aided the fight against
terrorism and has not infringed on constitutional rights or civil
liberties.
Speaking at the conservative-leaning think tank American Enterprise
Institute, he lauded the achievements of law enforcement in preventing
another terrorist attack in the nearly two years since Sept. 11,
2001, and in tracking down suspected terrorist cells in suburban
Buffalo and Portland, Ore.
"We have built a new ethos of justice, one rooted in cooperation,
nurtured by coordination and focused on a single overarching goal:
the prevention of terrorist attacks," Ashcroft said. "All
of this has been done within the safeguards or our Constitution,
and the guarantees that our Constitution provides, protecting
American freedom."
( So why aren't they stopping heroin convoys in Afghanistan?)
ABCNEWS' Jason Ryan contributed to this report.
LEARNING FROM THE BEST:
SCHEME FOR INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES
29th August, 2003
Grants worth over $16 million to combat alcohol and other drug
misuse in Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander communities were detailed today by the
Federal Parliamentary Secretary
for Health, Trish Worth, following an announcement by the Prime
Minister.
"Communities will use these grants to learn how to combat
drug misuse. In particular, they
will learn from the experiences of other communities that have
shown outstanding success,"
Ms Worth said.
The Prime Minister has announced that $10.5 million from the
Tough on Drugs Diversion
Initiative would be directed towards a new National Drug Strategy
Indigenous Community
Initiative.
This will, over four years, support communities in developing
local solutions to prevent
harmful drug use, including control of alcohol supplies and issues
of substance use. The
funding will also assist in improving access to intervention services
and develop strategies to
prevent drug-related harm.
"Priority will be given to support initiatives that target
the link between alcohol use and family
violence. The program will encourage behaviours that reinforce
traditional Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander values and culture. Parenting and families
will be a high priority," Ms
Worth said.
"Clearly, this grant scheme must be community-driven. Many
communities have achieved
outstanding success. Funds will help communities develop detailed
project plans for new
initiatives and bring these ideas to fruition."
$6.1 million in projects for NGOs
In addition, the Australian Government will provide $6.1 million
worth of new projects under
the Non Government Organisation Treatment Grants Program (NGOTGP)
to target alcohol
and drug abuse in indigenous communities.
Ms Worth said the Australian Government has sought to improve
the health and welfare of
Indigenous people with a strong focus on practical reconciliation.
This new community grants scheme, the National Drug Strategy Indigenous
Community
Initiative, aims to assist communities to address priority and
immediate areas of concern
identified under the recently-endorsed National Drug Strategy
Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Peoples' Complementary Action Plan.
Media contact: Mark Williams, Ms Worth's Media Adviser 0401 147
558
BACKGROUND
The National Drug Strategy Indigenous Community Initiative will
provide $10.5 million for
new community grants to help divert Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander people from
alcohol and drug abuse.
In addition, $6.1 million for NGOTGP projects will target alcohol
and drug abuse in
indigenous communities. The details are:
Aboriginal Medical Service Cooperative Ltd (NSW) $801,508
Ngaimpe Aboriginal Corporation (NSW) $162,887
Ngwala Willumbong Cooperative Ltd (Vic) $376,532
Wuchopperen Medical Service Ltd (Qld) $672,153
Mamu Health Service Ltd (Qld) $483,339
North East Regional Youth Council (WA) $214,996
Mission Australia - Yirra Program (WA) $183,842
Mission Australia - OnTRACK Program (WA) $550,000
Warburton Community Inc (WA) $218,473
Nunkuwarrin Yunti of South Australia Inc (SA) $141,310
The Salvation Army (SA) $291,270
Aboriginal Drug & Alcohol Council of SA Inc (SA) $655,857
NPY Women's Council Aboriginal Corporation $604,187
Banyan House (NT) $411,553
Central Australian Aboriginal Congress Inc (NT) $378,000
In addition, the Australian Government will ensure that a new
emphasis, backed by an
appropriate proportion of funds, is directed towards services
for indigenous
communities under the $215 million diversion initiative of the
National Illicit Drugs
Strategy.
For fact sheet: Non-Government Organisation Treatment Grants
Programme, go to www.health.gov.au/mediarel/yr2003/tw/twmr2003.htm
MAYDAY IS JAY-DAY!
So far, 57 Cities Have Signed up for 2004 .
(Next year, the first Saturday of May falls on May 1)
Albany
Albuquerque
Ashland
Bratislava
Buenos aires
Capetown
Christchurch
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Darwin
Dayton
Des Moines
Detroit
Dover
Dublin
Eugene
Fayetteville
Flint
Frankfurt
Ft. Lauderdale
Halifax
Helsinki
Houston
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Lansing
Mexico City
Minneapolis
Montpelier
Nashville
Newark
New Orleans
New York
Nimbin
Ogden
Orlando
Paducah
Parkersburg
Prague
Raleigh-Durham
Rapid City
Richmond
Rosario
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
San Juan
San Marcos
St. Louis
Tampa
Toronto
Traverse City
Tucson
Tupelo
Vancouver
Wichita
Wilmington
THAT'S ALL FOR NOW FOLKS!
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