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Kronic problem refuses to go away

SYNTHETIC drugs are increasingly being found in the New South Wales coalfields with a Cessnock man yesterday being arrested for allegedly selling synthetic drugs from a Neath service station.

Lou Caruana
Kronic problem refuses to go away

Police arrested the 27-year-old at the service station yesterday while he was working and seized 370 grams of synthetic cannabis, known as Kronic, and 17g of synthetic cocaine known as White Revolver, according to the Newcastle Herald.

Kronic is a mix of herbs and chemicals containing synthetic cannabinoids that mimic the effect of cannabis, giving users feelings of euphoria and relaxation.

Health experts have warned that Kronic use can also result in paranoia, nausea, high blood pressure and hallucinations.

Kronic is a leafy green material adulterated with one or more compounds that convey similar pharmacological properties as delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the primary psychoactive constituent of marijuana.

The man was taken to Cessnock police station and charged with two counts of possessing a prohibited substance and two counts of supply.

The state and federal governments banned the sale of synthetic drugs in June last year.

The detection of synthetic drug Kronic on work sites has prompted New South Wales mine safety operations director Rob Regan to remind coal mining companies that state legislation makes it their responsibility to ensure drugs are not affecting any employee’s performance in the workplace.

The synthetic cannabinoid was detected in as many as one in 10 Western Australian miners in 2011, prompting NSW and Queensland mines to also begin testing workers, according to NSW Trade and Investment Journal Mine Safety Update.

“Our mining-specific legislation requires the operator to provide a health and safety management system that identifies and controls risks to the operation,” Regan reportedly said.

“A good operator will recognise that alcohol and other drugs (AOD) may present a risk and have policy and procedures as part of fitness for work, to control these risks.

“However, those policies and procedures must have been developed through and with the consultation of the workforce.”

The Coal Mine Health and Safety Regulation 2006 clause 148 specifies the coal operation must have a fitness for work program that includes measures to eliminate or control risks from the consumption of drugs at the coal operation.

The Mine Health and Safety Regulation 2007 makes a similar provision at clauses 82 and 83 that a person must not take drugs into a mine without the mine operator’s authority.

The Work Health and Safety Act 2011 directs the requirements of workers and others at the workplace.

They must take reasonable care for their own health and safety and take reasonable care that their acts or omissions do not adversely affect the health and safety of others.

They must also comply with any reasonable instruction by the person conducting a business or undertaking and the worker must cooperate with any reasonable policy or procedure of the PCBU.

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