Hard News by Russell Brown

66

Stop acting like the law is someone else's responsibility

On Morning Report today, Prime Minister John Key was interviewed about a new poll indicating that nearly two thirds of New Zealanders want the law reformed to legalise or decriminalise use and possession of small quantities of cannabis.

Mr Key declared himself "not a massive fan" of these things.

"One of the things that Parliament does is send a message to people about activity we want to see or not want to see and um in the4 case of drugs I think if we were as parliament to decriminlaise then one of the messages we'd be sending is that increased drug use is okay.

"And I know that people would say, we, you know, that seems a bit silly given that there's widespread recreational use and we know that. But I don't think the police really for the most part do prosecute in this case."

Actually, the police are still arresting about 15,000 people a year for personal use and possession of cannabis. Not all those arrests lead to prosecutions, of course, and I do think it's true that – as Cam Price argued last year –  that in recent years New Zealand police have, whatever the law says, been applying a form of de facto decriminalisation.

Graeme Edgeler put it to me on Twitter this morning that Key was applauded for emphasising that the police would apply their discretion when the Section 59 "reasonable force" defence for child discipline was removed – so why scorn him for saying the same about drug law? And why is one "message" law, passed on the understanding that it would not lead to prosecution in every case, a good thing, when another is not? He wasn't just trolling: it's a reasonable philosphical question.

The presence of a victim in one case and not the other provides a fairly obvious point of difference. But there's also the  matter of the sheer number of cases,  the consequences of of a conviction – and the fact that police discretion is not appplied without bias: one study found that Māori experience police arrest for cannabis use at three times the rate of non-Māori.

Also, the removal of Section 59 – and thus the special status of hitting children as opposed to anyone else – brought the law in line with overall government policy. The continued refusal to countenance any reform of of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975, on the other and, has created a growing gulf between the law and the government's own National Drug Drug Policy, which is all about "proportional" responses founded in public health health principles and not criminal law. I honestly can't think of a law so obviously antithetical to the government's stated policy goals.

The Law Commission took a similar view in its review of drug regulation in 2010, and suggested various reforms, including ways in which police discretion could be guided. As Sir Geoffrey Palmer put it when the commission's review was published: 

There may be a case for taking more flexible approaches to offences involving possession of small quantities of drugs for personal use.

The review was not only summarily rejected by the government at the time, it had the paradoxical effect of John Key's government establishing and campaigning on the position that it would never change drug law.

The new poll is even more emphatic on medical cannabis. Sixty six per cent of respondents believed that "growing or using cannabis for pain relief if you have a terminal illness" should be legalised and a further 16% thought it should be decriminalised. Only 15% believed it should remain illegal. There was only slightly less support when the question was refined to the simple use of cannabis for pain relief.

No problem, says the Prime Minister.

"The truth is that the police don't prosecute people in that [indistict]."

Well, firstly, he doesn't know that. Secondly, it's not true – a number of people convicted as a result of last summer's expensive but newsworthy cannabis recovery operation identified themselves as medical cannabis users.

And thirdly, a leader who has just hailed the role of Parliament shouldn't be in the next breath handing over the content of the law to police. Key suggested more than once in the interview that police don't often prosecute for cannabis use and possession, that "in a lot of cases the police turn a blind eye to this".

So should, Guyon Espiner asked him, possession of a small amount of cannabis in general result in a criminal conviction?

"People break the law all the time. I mean technically, when people go 15km/h in a 50km/h speed zone, you're breaking the law. So there are always tolerances and margins. It's for the police to determine that."

It really isn't. The police have, it is true, taken a number of influential steps in the past decade – from the pre-charge warning system to Prime Ministerially-endorsed "turning a blind eye" – but it's probably past the point of of it being ultra vires. If such a level of discretion is in fact desirable, then it should be in the law.

The New Zealand Law Commission took a similar view in 2010, proposing a formal system of warnings. Its review also has a thoughtful section on medical cannabis, which acknowledges the widespread view of health sector submitters that for cannabis to be formally approved as a medicine it should have to pass the same tests other other medicines and be standardised and subject to trials.

But it also acknowledges the strong belief of other submitters that the use of raw cannabis manages their pain or other symptoms effectively and with fewer side effects than the standardised medicines that have been approved for their use, and therefore:

... we think that the proper moral position is to promote clinical trials as soon as practicable. We recommend this approach to the Government. 

And in the meantime:

... while trials are being conducted, we think that it would be appropriate for the police to adopt a policy of non-prosecution in cases where they are satisfied that cannabis use is directed towards pain relief or managing the symptoms of chronic or debilitating illness.

That sentence has since widely been interpreted as a call for a "moratorium" on medical cannabis prosecutions at least until there are standardised cannabis-based medicines available. That's actually a sensible and ethical thing to do. But it is not something the police should be expected to do independently of government. It's not even desirable. Lawmakers need to stop acting as if the law is someone else's responsibility.

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The interesting thing about the poll is that it was commissioned by the Drug Foundation from Curia Research – David Farrar's company, the firm whose monitoring of the public mood has helped deliver the National Party successve election victories. That's not surprising: Curia's rate for having a question or questions added to its regular polling is quite reasonable.

But I've remarked in the past that law reform would appear on the horizon when a Curia poll showed that the people National relies on for votes favoured it. Well, guess what? That actually happened.

When responses are divided by "Probed Party Vote", National voters are still markedly more prohibitionist than supporters of any other party: 42% wanted possession of even a small amount of cannabis to remain a criminal offence,  versus 29% of Labour voters, 33% of Maori Party voters, 0% of Act voters, 35% of New Zealand First voters and 15% of apparently confused Green Party voters.

But a majority of National voters support law reform in the poll: 28% are in favour of legalisation and 27% decriminalisation.

I suppose it's possible that in taking any action National could risk losing voters, but it's hard to see where they'd go. The political risks of cannabis law reform look to have sharply decreased – and if Key's government hadn't spent the years since 2010 campaigning on never, ever changing the law we'd probably be seeing that happening now. But positions that aren't based on evidential or philosophical foundations are easier to abandon than considered positions. So yes, that might be something peeking over the horizon ...

27

Friday Music: Reduction Agents Redux (and The Get Down)

Auckland's Lil Chief Records has released a notable body of curious pop over the years – think the Brunettes, Voom, Princess Chelsea, Sheep, Dog & Wolf and and Jonathan Bree – but it seems to go through quite long quiet spells, punctuated by bursts of activity.

They're on a burst at the moment, with the news that a reissue of The Reduction Agents' The Dance Reduction Agents has been organised – the first time the album's been available on vinyl. The Reduction Agents are, of course, the group led by James Milne before he became Lawrence Arabia. I picked up my copy at the recent Lawrence Arabia show, it's on white vinyl, I'm listening to it now and it sounds really gorgeous. You can pre-order the vinyl here.

But wait, there's more! Lil Chief recruited various of Milne's peers to record all the tracks as a tribute album. The preview track is the Ruby Suns' remake of 'Our Jukebox Run is Over'. It, too, is lovely:

It all comes together in an album release show at Golden Dawn on the 18th, featuring the tribute band The Dance Reduction Agents (nb: may contain traces of the Reduction Agents – is it even a thing to be in your own tribute band?).

UPDATE: The vinyl is out today and the tribute album is on Bandcamp and also there to listen to on Soundcloud:

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Another Lil Chief band is Shaft. I mentioned their brilliant new song 'Meteor in Your Mind' a couple of weeks ago.

Well, they're having a release show for it tomorrow night at the Thirsty Dog, along with the Naenae Express (who don't sound like what you might imagine from their name, they're more sort of warm, reverby jangle), The Situations and Will Saunders, all for only five bucks.

In case you've forgotten (and I frankly don't see how you could forget that chorus), 'Meteor in Your Mind' goes like this:

Nice poster too:

Turns out there's a lot of it on this weekend. Those merry pranksters Gold Medal Famous are playing at UFO in New Lynn tomorrow night (and bringing their theremin competition and chees-medal prizes with them). And the Axemen return to Golden Dawn tonight.

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Flying Out have done the second lineup announcement for the 2016 The Others Way festival, which takes place in venues on and around Karangahape Road on Friday September 2, adding Nadia Reid, Sleepers Union, King Loser and others to what is now a vast bill including David Kilgour and The Phoenix Foundation. Info and ticket sales here.

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On Audioculture, Murray Cammick has a marvellous illustrated memoir of how an art-school kid with a passion for soul music came to cover Auckland's emerging punk rock scene. Most of the pics are local, but they include this fabulous picture of Debbie Harry at the Intercontinental in 1977:

Meanwhile, The Saints have had their revenge on Brisbane. The Queensland State Library is plainly very pleased to have obtained a copy of the original, self-released version of the  band's unthinkably great 1976 debut single '(I'm) Stranded.

Which sounds to me like an excellent excuse to again present The Saints playing '(I'm) Stranded' on black and white TV in 1976:

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Tunes!

This blog has been a bit short on kitchen-dancing material lately, but I aim to remedy that this week.

First up, I found this through The Golden Pony's Soundcloud. It's a bloody great disco banger. And it's a blessedly simple free download – just click the "Buy" button:

Another free download (mildly annoying Artists Union palaver, or just pay a donation) is this strung-out take on Steve Wonder's 'As':

Baynk, the New Zealander who came out of nowhere to play Laneway this year, continues to attract attention internationally. This is his new one on the French label Air de Paris. Free download for a bit of Soundcloud liking and following fiddliness:

This is odd, but I like it. Auckland's Frano, now with A Label Called Success, takes apart Bon Iver's 'Perth' and reassembles it in epic fashion:

Thanks to my buddy Keegan for the heads-up on this: Loleatta Holloway singing the blazes out of Otis Redding's 'I've Been Loving You Too Long' at The Paradise Garage in 1979. The recording's a bit scratchy but the atmosphere is incredible. You can hear the crowd shouting back at her. Wow.

And, staying with the back-in-the-day New York vibe ... I read Bill Brewster's Last Night a DJ Saved My Life this year, and the book conjures very well the excitement of of the street jams that gave birth to hip hop. But how did they actually sound? Turns out, there are recordings.

Via this old blog post, I found this 47-minute capture of a 1977 party. It's really great – and a chance to hear all those grooves and breaks before they got edited and sampled and recontextualised over the next 40 years:

A comment from a DJ Red Eye has the track-listing at this (note the back-to-back play on the second tune – that's how DJs did extended mixes before they could make edits on their computers):

1.Lamont Dozier- Back To My Roots 2.Peter Brown- Do you Wanna Get Funky With Me (2 copies back and forth) 3. Loleatta Holloway- Hit N Run 4.Rose Royce- Do Your Dance 5. Leroy Hutson- Feel The Spirit 6.New York Community Choir- Express Yourself 7. Vicki Sue Robinson- Hold Tight 8.Munich Machine-Funk Train

There's more of the same here on this Soundcloud account.

All of which provides an ideal introduction to The Get Down, Baz Luhrmann's spectacular-looking story of the birth of hip hop culture (and the last days of disco) in the Bronx, which is available on Netflix from 7pm today. Indiewire calls it "the best $120m Netflix ever spent" at the top of this intriguing interview with Luhrmann and Grandmaster Flash, who is both an advisor to and a character in the show:

“I wanted to answer the question, ‘Where did this brand new idea come from?'” Luhrmann said. “And it came from active imaginations on a landscape that was devastated. From those who had so little, so much imagination sprang forth.”

There's also this featurette with Flash:

Regular readers will know that I am mildly obsessed with this era in this city. So yeah, you know I'm watching this tonight. I wonder if there'll be any punk rockers?

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The Hard News Friday Music Post is kindly sponsored by:

The Audio Consultant

13

Orcon IRL 5: Media and Journalism

It is the best of times, it is the worst of times … it sometimes looks like the end of times.

ORCON IRL AT THE GOLDEN DAWN is back on Tuesday, August 23 to ask the hard questions about MEDIA AND JOURNALISM. And what a lineup we have!

RUSSELL BROWN asks Morning Report's GUYON ESPINER about getting up early and setting the news agenda every damn day, even when you just don't feel like talking to Winston Peters.

Ace Mana magazine editor LEONIE HAYDEN comes in as co-host and quizzes the New Zealand Herald's KIRSTY JOHNSTON and The Spinoff's ALEX CASEY about where it's at right now.

And former MediaWorks news chief MARK JENNINGS and former Herald editor TIM MURPHY discuss the changing media landscape and explain their new venture and how they're going to save everyone.

It all happens from 6.30pm on TUESDAY, AUGUST 23 at The Golden Dawn Tavern of Power, corner Richmond and Ponsonby Roads. And if you can't make it to the venue, the team from 95bFM will be streaming it all live on the internet.

UPDATE: We are pleased to announce that we have secured the services of top journalistic DJ team ALAN PERROTT and LIAM DANN to provide the musical interludes.

Entry is free and this is going to be a RAM DANCEHALL, so don't delay and RSVP here on the Facebook event page. (If you don't do Facebook, just click the email button at the bottom of this post and let me know you'd like to come.)

35

"Meth contamination": the making of a moral panic

The first time I half-heard a news report about Housing New Zealand tenants "contaminating" homes by smoking methamphetamine in them, I assumed it was a mistake. Clandestine labs, sure: they can leave behind some some hazardous chemicals, depending on the actual process employed. But a dwelling being rendered uninhabitable and needing to be torn apart simply because meth was consumed in it? It didn't seem possible.

It isn't possible.

I'm grateful to Matters of Substance, the magazine of the New Zealand Drug Foundation, for commissioning me to investigate the way this all got out of hand – and for making the decision to publish the story online today, rather than waiting until the end of the month for the printed version. In the story, I wrote this:

If the “meth contamination” mess can fairly be described as a moral panic, it has broader implications than most moral panics. Not only is it creating havoc in the property investment market, it is prompting Housing New Zealand to do precisely the wrong thing with vulnerable people. 

Early on in the process, I wondered how on earth we could get out of this self-sustaining disaster. I'm more optimistic now. Dr Nick Kim's willingness to go public with his criticism of the way the Ministry of Health's meth lab remediation guidelines had been misunderstood and misused has been crucial. And the sheer cost of the misapprehension – Housing New Zealand has budgeted $22 million for testing and remediation this year and will almost certainly blow past that – has finally gained the attention of the government.

When I asked Dr Kim whether he blamed journalists for the panic, he was charitable: they were simply following the official word, he thought. I'm less inclined to be charitable. This whole thing has been allowed to develop over two or three years as a consequence of weak and credulous reporting. Time and time again, "experts" who are not experts and who have have an obvious conflict of interest have been quoted by journalists who should have known better. Instead of revealing a grossly under-regulated industry, they consistently gave that industry credibility it did not deserve.

And the troublesome guidelines themselves? As I've sought to make clear in the story, when they were created in 2010 there was a paucity of information and almost nothing in the way of formal standards internationally. There was pressure to come up with a number and that number turned out to be very low.

I note in the story that the choice of the 0.5 microgram guideline (it could equally have been the statutory level of 1.5 that applies in California) was influenced by the peer reviewing of a team from Forensic and Industrial Science and noted that part of the argument there was that methamphetamine can be treated as a proxy for other, harder-to-test-for chemicals associated with manufacture. It does seem worth acknowledging that one of those reviewers, Elizabeth McKenzie, was also doing work on meth persistence that was later reflected in her PhD thesis, and which was relevant.

But she isn't a toxicologist, the published guidelines were not intended as a benchmark for human safety and the guidelines should never have been applied outside their purpose: which was to guide the remediation of places where meth had been manufactured.

Why did the Ministry of Health stay silent while all hell broke loose? It's hard to say, but this is the kind of issue where people keep their heads down. It's notable that after his initial commentary for the Science Media Centre, observing that "the concentrations will not be sufficiently high enough to cause either psychoactive or toxic effects", Dr Leo Schep of the National Poisons Centre referred subsequent press inquiries to Dr Kim.

The real victims of this debacle are the Housing NZ tenants who lost their homes, often on the basis of no more than suspicion or gossip. As I note in the story, the corporation's meth team went some  pretty grim places with this problem – even "talking about" the idea of making universal drug tests a precondition of tenancy. They seem to have lost touch with Housing NZ's role as a social agency.

I can't be sure, but I suspect Housing NZ's practice, at least as far as remediation goes, is already quietly changing. When I visited the Housing NZ flats in Greys Avenue a little over a month ago, I counted nine places boarded up up. There are only a couple now, and some of those opened have not been stripped out. Number 37, boarded up since March, is getting a paint job only. So needless cost may be being curbed now.

That will be of little comfort to those who have lost their homes and security. This is a story of how things get out of hand, and how moral panic and drug stigma lead us to make terrible decisions.

You can read the story here at Matters of Substance.

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NB: An OIA response from Housing NZ arrived after the print deadline and I was only able to incorporate a couple of key points in the story – those being that Housing NZ has ruled out doing universal baseline tests for methamphetamine before its properties are occupied, and that it took no advice on the socal impact of evicting people who may have had drug problems. I've uploaded it and you're welcome to have a look through it.

45

All right, then – take me to Rio

It's been a while since I approached an Olympic Games with less anticipation than the current one. And that was before someone I know had to escape from Rio because her boyfriend got kidnapped and extorted by police and their lives were not safe anynmore. Basically, Brazil seemed to have way too many problems to be holding hands and playing handball.

The spat between the Olympic broadcast rights holder Sky Television and newspaper editors didn't help either. Unwilling to sign away their fair-dealing rights-in-law to show 90-second clips from the coverage in news reports, the papers were thus denied acccess and cancelled their own reporting from Rio. It all seemed to point to an Olympics that few people would care about.

But it was impossible to dislike Saturday's opening ceremony. The colours were bright, the art direction and design were strong and that Olympic flame sculpture was a sort of psychoactive substance unto itself. Even the endless parade of athletes was oddly mesmerising. (I would have mocked the uniforms of the teams from Norway and Sweden, but as a New Zealander I'm not in a position to mock anyone's kit.)

And there is something about watching sport in state-of-the-art bells-and-whistles HD. Sports you might not usually see – in particular, sports played by women. There is, for example, an internatonal women's Sevens circuit, but the coverage is average and generally tucked away where you won't see it. Sevens in Rio looks fab, the crowd is having a proper party and our team, the Sevens Sistas, look fast and fit; none more than Tyla Nathan-Wong, who seems perpetually poised to perform a handspring.

She also tweeted this lovely picture of her mum and dad:

Elsewhere, we have that most affirming thing, a legitimate refereeing grievance. Football Ferns captain Abby Erceg received a completely bizarre red card in the course of her team's 1-) win over Colombia:

Surely Erceg's red card should be rescinded and the Colombian player Tatiana Ariza should be disciplined for attempting to deceive officials? I dunno though. Football seems to take a different view of these things.

There has also been an expression of continuity with tradition. As ever, the horse-parking round proves to the New Zealand equestrian team's achilles heel. Er, hoof.

Further in keeping with tradition, a young Australian sportsman has been a bit of a dick, allowing us access to our our own perceived national virtue of being sporting good sorts. You can't moan.

So yeah, take me to Rio and its nine channels of pin-sharp colour and graphic gizmotronics. Let's see how it goes.