Otago Daily Times

Drugchecki­ng at O Week now open activity

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

FOR the first time at the University of Otago’s O Week, drug checking is out of a legal grey area and out in the open.

Know Your Stuff NZ volunteers began three days of testing samples of illegal recreation­al drugs in the front room of the Otago University Students’ Associatio­n’s Clubs and Socs building, in Albany St, yesterday.

The drugchecki­ng service has worked behind the scenes in previous years at O Week, and has since 2019 been promoted by the OUSA.

But temporary legislatio­n was only passed late last year to give legal certainty to drugchecki­ng organisati­ons such as Know Your Stuff NZ.

OUSA chief executive Debbie Downs said she hoped the associatio­n had played a role in normalisin­g drug checking for MDMA and other drugs among young people.

Once she had understood the prevalence of recreation­al MDMAlike drugs such as molly, or ecstasy, among studentage­d people, she had decided that an antidrug campaign would be fruitless.

The best role for the OUSA was to try to reduce drug harm, Ms Downs said.

‘‘It’s a very, very different world to 20, 25 years ago when I might have been at a party somewhere,’’ she said.

‘‘As older adults, as parents, sometimes we forget that.

‘‘It’s as common as having a beer.’’

Know Your Stuff NZ Dunedin regional and South Island manager Finn Boyle said it was difficult to say whether there had been an increased uptake of testing since the temporary legislatio­n was passed in December, but testing results this summer had been concerning.

More than twothirds of the presumed MDMA tested this month in Dunedin was a potentiall­y dangerous substitute.

Only about 30% of drugs presumed to be MDMA in Dunedin were MDMA.

More often than not the drugs were a substitute drug, typically from the cathinone family.

And nearly half of the supposed MDMA tested was the new, and potentiall­y dangerous, drug eutylone.

Eutylone was first identified in New Zealand at an OUSA event in 2018, Mr Boyle said.

About 80% of the drugs Know Your Stuff NZ volunteers were testing was presumed to be MDMA, but testing LSD and ketamine was also common.

The drugchecki­ng company had always been public about its purpose and its results, but it had to be quiet about the events it attended, he said.

With the new legislatio­n, it could now be very clear about where it was testing, Mr Boyle said.

But a stigma remained around clients and the testers themselves.

Some people held the view Know Your Stuff NZ volunteers were at events to encourage drug use, but Mr Boyle said the organisati­on was concerned with informed decisionma­king.

The least risky drug was no drug at all, he said.

‘‘But we accept that often people do choose to use drugs and so we are here to try to reduce the harms and risks involved with that behaviour.’’

When the temporary legislatio­n was passed in December, Health Minister Andrew Little said the Government would develop and consult on regulation­s to provide a longterm solution.

There was evidence that drug harmreduct­ion initiative­s had not resulted in more drug use but kept people safer, he said.

❛ Often people do choose to use drugs and so we are here to try to reduce the harms and

risks

 ?? PHOTOS: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ?? Showing up the youngsters . . . Campus cop John Woodhouse punches out more pushups than the students in this annual competitio­n.
PHOTOS: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Showing up the youngsters . . . Campus cop John Woodhouse punches out more pushups than the students in this annual competitio­n.
 ?? REPORT: JOHN GIBB PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? University of Otago students Maraea te Waitoatoa Golias (18, left) and Olivia Williams (18), both of Wellington, enjoy their hangi food at the University of Otago Maori Centre during O Week events yesterday. Students flocked to the hangi food at the Castle St centre, and one participan­t later later posted on social media that the hangi food had been ‘‘sooo good’’.
REPORT: JOHN GIBB PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH University of Otago students Maraea te Waitoatoa Golias (18, left) and Olivia Williams (18), both of Wellington, enjoy their hangi food at the University of Otago Maori Centre during O Week events yesterday. Students flocked to the hangi food at the Castle St centre, and one participan­t later later posted on social media that the hangi food had been ‘‘sooo good’’.
 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? Identifica­tion process . . . Know Your Stuff NZ Dunedin team leader Ashley Heydon legally tests a drug sample at the University of Otago Clubs and Societies building yesterday.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON Identifica­tion process . . . Know Your Stuff NZ Dunedin team leader Ashley Heydon legally tests a drug sample at the University of Otago Clubs and Societies building yesterday.
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