Nelson Mail

Meth tester: We didn’t make the rules

- Anuja Nadkarni

A meth tester has slammed Housing Minister Phil Twyford’s comments that the industry ‘‘exploited’’ the lack of clear guidelines for meth contaminat­ion testing.

Yesterday Twyford apologised to those affected by the meth myth saga, saying the situation was ‘‘appalling’’ and the testing industry had ‘‘exploited the lack of clear guidelines that the National Government should have promised.’’

Residue Testing NZ director David Spalter said the industry had simply responded to standards set out by government department­s and Housing New Zealand’s actions.

‘‘Housing New Zealand were throwing people out of homes, and I said for many years people were over-hyping it. Pulling out wall boards was ridiculous.’’

He said government department­s did not hear industry warnings that the standards were too low.

Earlier this week a report from the Prime Minister’s chief science adviser, Sir Peter Gluckman, found there was no risk to humans from third-hand exposure to houses where methamphet­amine had been consumed. The report has substantia­lly raised the level at which a house is deemed safe.

Another meth tester, Neville Pettersson, said many meth testers already knew the standard was creating unnecessar­y panic.

‘‘The standard was quite low and was freaking people out, but the report now says those houses are all OK. But a lot of us knew they were OK anyway,’’ Pettersson said.

Spalter said the report suggesting people could stay in homes without experienci­ng adverse health effects encouraged meth users to smoke in their house.

‘‘In the short term the industry’s future looks glum, but long term it will be booming if you’re signalling people can smoke indoors and get away with it,’’ Spalter said.

 ??  ?? Phil Twyford
Phil Twyford

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