Greens welcome injecting facility announcement but call for changes

2020-06-05

Local Greens MPs for Melbourne, Ellen Sandell and Adam Bandt, have welcomed the government’s decision to expand the number of supervised injecting trial sites, including in Melbourne, saying the Greens had repeatedly pushed the government to relieve the pressure on Richmond residents by expanding trial locations.

The Greens were the first political party to advocate for the supervised injecting facility trial.

Sandell and Bandt said the Melbourne trial is an opportunity to get the community consultation right after the government mishandled community engagement in Richmond, and that they were disappointed Minister Martin Foley failed to have an additional trial centre in St Kilda, in his electorate.

Quotes attributable to Deputy Leader of the Victorian Greens, Ellen Sandell MP:

“This is exactly what the Greens have been calling for: more safe injecting rooms to take the pressure off residents in Richmond and save lives. But this time, the Victorian Government needs to do it properly and consult with residents and Council. 

“Without resident involvement, the social licence of the centre comes under threat, so I hope Labor learns the lessons from Richmond. If we work together on this, we can make it work.

“The new site must be built in consultation with the community members who will be using it and those living near it.

“Unfortunately, the expansion of trial sites hasn’t extended to areas like St Kilda, despite the review identifying them as areas of high demand from users living there. The Minister has to justify to his community why he failed to also provide a potentially lifesaving service in his own electorate.”

Quotes attributable to Leader of the Australian Greens, Adam Bandt MP:

“The government seems to have finally listened to the Greens, who have consistently argued that more trial sites will help save lives and take strain off the Richmond facility and residents.

“This is an opportunity for the government to get it right with residents and ensure the centre has the support to become a permanent feature.

“The Richmond experience shows that there must be a taskforce overseeing the trial that includes residents, centre staff, police and all levels of government.”