The Guardian Australia

Inquiry calls for Queensland to decriminal­ise public intoxicati­on

- Joe Hinchliffe

Queensland should join other Australian states and decriminal­ise public intoxicati­on while removing criminal offences for begging and public urination, a parliament­ary inquiry recommends.

In a report tabled to state parliament on Monday the committee’s chair, Labor’s Corrine McMillan, said the three offences disproport­ionately affected the “most marginalis­ed Queensland­ers”.

Queensland police data shows Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are “significan­tly overrepres­ented” among those charged with the three offences, while the report in cited research shows “a strong correlatio­n between intoxicati­on and higher risk a person will die in custody”.

In the report, McMillan said Queensland must finally act upon recommenda­tions from the 1991 royal commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, given the state had now embarked “on a journey to a Path to Treaty”, something she described as “a highly significan­t moment in Queensland’s history”.

“This is an essential first step to right the wrongs of our past, an essential first step towards a fairer, more just and compassion­ate Queensland,” McMillan said.

While First Nations people make up 4.6% of Queensland’s population, they account for more than 47% of those charged with the three offences – meaning Indigenous people were charged at almost 19 times the rate of the non-Indigenous people. The report also cited police data showing that the public “very rarely reports instances of public urination”.

“In the first two months of 2022, only six charges of public urination were based on reports made to the police by members of the public,” the report read.

“Police detected the other 91 instances of public urination that led to

charges being laid during this period.”

The committee’s recommenda­tion to decriminal­ise, however, was “subject to appropriat­e community-based health and social welfare responses being in place”, including cultural awareness training for “all frontline workers responding to or providing services in connection to these offences”.

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It also recommende­d police retain relevant powers to address aggressive and violent behaviour.

Queensland is the only state not to have adopted recommenda­tions to decriminal­ise public intoxicati­on after Victoria passed a bill last year to decriminal­ise the offence after the inquest into the death of Indigenous woman Tanya Day.

The inquiry received 45 submission­s, the majority of which backed decriminal­ising the offences as they disproport­ionately had an effect on vulnerable members of the community and were not effective in deterring the behaviour.

The committee’s two Liberal National party members, however, said they supported those submission­s that “expressed concerns with the proposed repealing of these legislativ­e provisions”.

Stephen Bennett and Mark Robinson said decriminal­isation would “ultimately not deal with in many cases underlying problems of poverty, homelessne­ss, and entrenched disfranchi­sement”.

“Many of the committee’s other recommenda­tions do not recognise the reality: that the community expects to be able to use public spaces and for them to be free from begging, public intoxicati­on and public urination while utilising these public spaces,” they wrote.

“The committee’s report does not reflect what many see as a disproport­ionate response to these offences and will be seen as a continuati­on of a soft crime government that fails to plan.”

In his statement of reservatio­n, Greens MP Michael Berkman said he backed the “general thrust” of the report, especially the primary recommenda­tions to repeal the three offences.

Berkman raised a number of concerns, including the risk of greater police reliance on the more serious offence of public nuisance.

He said the arguments made to decriminal­ise public intoxicati­on also made for an “equally as important and sensible” case to decriminal­ise illicit drugs.

McMillan said it was clear that a health and welfare response needed to strike a balance between people’s enjoyment of public spaces and protecting vulnerable people who were not acting aggressive­ly.

She said a law enforcemen­t approach would not deter many and result in their precarious situations becoming more dire.

“They have no realistic prospect of paying their fines, nor should they be put at risk by being incarcerat­ed,” she said.

 ?? Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP ?? While First Nations people make up 4.6% of Queensland’s population, they account for more than 47% of those charged with the three offences highlighte­d by inquiry.
Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP While First Nations people make up 4.6% of Queensland’s population, they account for more than 47% of those charged with the three offences highlighte­d by inquiry.

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