Public drunkenness will no longer be a a criminal offence in Victoria under changes which take effect from Melbourne Cup Day. 

The state government four years ago committed to transitioning from a criminal justice response to the issue to a public health approach, though significant progress had been sidelined by the Covid pandemic. 

Below Daily Mail Australia takes a look at the November 7 changes and what you need to know.

What are the new rules?

From next Tuesday public intoxication is no longer illegal in Victoria.

Police will be unable to arrest and detain people for being drunk in public and place them in cells while they sober up.

However, they do still have the authority to arrest people for other offences which could be linked, such as public nuisance, assault, vandalism or public safety. 

If police do encounter someone who is clearly drunk in a public setting and needs assistance they can direct them to a ‘sobering up centre’ which is not a police cell and there will be no record of an offence. 

The law in Victoria will be changed on Melbourne Cup Day to decriminalise being drunk in public (pictured: a model celebrates the opening of the 2023 Spring Racing Carnival)

The law in Victoria will be changed on Melbourne Cup Day to decriminalise being drunk in public (pictured: a model celebrates the opening of the 2023 Spring Racing Carnival)

The law in Victoria will be changed on Melbourne Cup Day to decriminalise being drunk in public (pictured: a model celebrates the opening of the 2023 Spring Racing Carnival)

Why Melbourne Cup Day?

Rather than the Victorian Government loosening up the rules for the state’s biggest party, the date has more to do with red tape.

The laws were set to be changed on November 7 last year, specifically the Monday after the Melbourne Cup weekend, but were pushed back a year by Covid-linked delays. 

What is a ‘sobering up centre’?

The government had intended for a 20-bed facility in Collingwood to be part of the health response by November 7 but the building work is not set to be completed until the end of November.

The facility is a repurposed aged care home in a residential neighbourhood near a school, which has sparked backlash from residents in the area. 

Sharrie Harrold, a mother of two teenagers who lives in the street, told The Age there was zero consultation with residents and she was concerned for her children.

Neighbour Francesca Rush said the facility would be better attached to a hospital rather than in her ‘quiet community’. 

The laws were set to be changed years ago but have been delayed by Covid disruptions

The laws were set to be changed years ago but have been delayed by Covid disruptions

The laws were set to be changed years ago but have been delayed by Covid disruptions

Private service provider cohealth has been contracted by the government to run the centre as part of a three-pronged approach that also includes street outreach teams and transportation services that can get people home.

Each team will have a nurse, a drug and alcohol specialist and a vehicle that will be required to have signage, official badges and uniforms. 

‘The vast majority of people who are out and about just need a bit of support to get home and that’s what will happen to the vast majority of instances,’ Premier Jacinta Allen said.

‘Whether it’s through police, whether it’s through ambulance services, those supports will be in place.’

What is the reason for the law change?

According to the Victorian Government a police response to public intoxication is ‘not appropriate and inconsistent with current community standards’.

There is concern in particular that the laws have a disproportionate effect on the Indigenous community.

Melbourne's racing season is underway with the 'race that stops the nation' set for November 7

Melbourne's racing season is underway with the 'race that stops the nation' set for November 7

Melbourne’s racing season is underway with the ‘race that stops the nation’ set for November 7

The Victorian government committed to decriminalising public drunkenness at the start of an inquest into the 2017 death of Yorta Yorta woman Tanya Day.

She was arrested on a train for being drunk in a public place and died after hitting her head in a concrete cell at Castlemaine Police Station.

A coroner found she wasn’t adequately checked on and her death was preventable.

‘Treating public drunkenness for what it is – a public health issue that demands a public health response – ensures we are keeping the community safe and reduces the risk of people dying in police custody,’ Ms Day’s family said in a statement.

‘Other states and territories should follow Victoria’s lead… As our mother’s case and all the other similar cases show, police cells are dangerous places for intoxicated people.’

Cohealth will continue to operate a six-bed trial site on Gertrude Street in Collingwood and mobile vans until the expanded site opens.

‘We are not going to continue where we have laws in this state that disproportionately see Indigenous Victorians end up in jail cells and very seriously significant consequences come as a result of that,’ the premier said.

The Victorian opposition previously moved legislation in the lower house to delay decriminalising public drunkennness but it was blocked by Labor.

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