The scourge of heroin

Sir, - One of the Dublin communities most devastated by heroin is St Michael's Estate in Inchicore

Sir, - One of the Dublin communities most devastated by heroin is St Michael's Estate in Inchicore. The local national school, St Michael's CBS, has been told by the Department of Education and Science that it has two pupils fewer than the required number to retain its present teaching staff.

The school principal, Mr Tom Mullins, in a letter to Mr Eoin Ryan TD (the Minister with responsibility for drugs), states: "We find it appalling that in spite of all the work we have put in and the huge level of need that all are now acknowledging is in the area, because our roll numbers are down by just two pupils we must now lose a teacher".

The Department of Education and Science is oblivious to the special circumstances of the school and also, presumably, to the nature of the heroin crisis. Some of the contributors to The Irish Times debate are not too far behind.

To categorise heroin as a recreational drug in order to make a case for its legalisation is both misinformed and counter-productive. To suggest that a panacea for the heroin crisis would be to make heroin freely available is to ignore the fact that in Dublin the gateway to heroin is social deprivation. The required response can only be massive social intervention with educational resources getting the highest priority - along with a variety of treatment strategies to assist those already using heroin.

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Interestingly, the Swiss spend five times more on social supports for the limited number of addicts participating in their heroin prescription programme than they do on the vast majority of their addicts who are on methadone maintenance.

While there may well be a strong case for a similar heroin prescription programme here to help keep those suffering chronic addiction alive, it is simply not defensible to offer legalised heroin as a solution to the victims of a society that has one of the highest levels of social inequality in the developed world.

Those of the contributors who argue that we should leave that underlying cause of the heroin crisis (i.e. social deprivation) to be "grappled with in the long term" while consigning those who live lives of despair through social neglect to "use heroin in a recreational manner" are a bit like Marie Antoinette suggesting cake as an alternative to bread for starving people.

It is surely ironic that this Government established a Cabinet sub-committee on social inclusion and drugs chaired by the Taoiseach, with the objective of finding more effective ways to channel additional resources into disadvantaged areas, while schools like St Michael's CBS, in possibly the most disadvantaged urban community in this country, must lose teachers; and those who are in the front line, whose efforts can do so much to identify and assist the children most vulnerable to the heroin scourge, are undermined by the State itself. - Yours, etc.

Tony Gregory TD, Dail Eireann, Dublin 2.