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BackVictoria's Collingwood sobering centre to close in mid-2027
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ABC Top Stories17.05.2026Politique3 dk okumaAustralia

Victoria's Collingwood sobering centre to close in mid-2027

L'essentiel

  • Victoria's Collingwood sobering centre, established less than four years ago after public intoxication was decriminalised, will close in mid-2027.
  • The Department of Health stated that localised services will replace the centralised model, with dedicated Aboriginal services to continue.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

Victoria's Collingwood sobering-up centre, opened in November 2023 after public intoxication was decriminalised, will close in mid-2027. The decision comes less than four years after the offence was abolished and health workers took responsibility from police. The centre faced criticism for low uptake.

Taille de police

Victoria's sobering-up centre in Collingwood will close next year, ending a support service for people found drunk in public less than four years after the offence was abolished.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains names and images of a person who has died. The image has been used with family permission.

The Department of Health, which confirmed the closure after questions from the ABC last week, insisted dedicated centres for Aboriginal people and outreach for the general population would continue.

The 20-bed site run by cohealth has endured criticism for low uptake since it opened in November 2023, when public intoxication was decriminalised and health workers took responsibility from police.

Outreach workers have since supported people who are drunk in public by offering water, help to get home, or phoning family. If needed, people are transported to the centre to sober up.

But a redesign of the framework over the coming year means people who are drunk in public and need extra support will progressively be taken to local health and community services instead of the Collingwood site, which will then close in mid-2027.

The department did not immediately explain which services would take responsibility.

"Victoria's public intoxication services will continue," a department spokesperson said.

"People intoxicated in public will continue to be supported by outreach services to help them get home safely or return to the care of family and friends.

"The centralised service model will evolve, with an emphasis on localised and integrated service delivery to ensure Victorians continue to get the care they need."

Work to continue

This month's state budget reduced funding to manage the reform from June 2027 onward, from $28.5 million to $23.8 million per year.

Dedicated centres for Aboriginal people will continue in St Kilda and regional areas like Shepparton.

Sobering up centres for the general population never opened in the regions.

The state opposition has long cast the centres as a waste of taxpayer money, housing an average of about three people a day in the first year, and argued the beds could be better used.

Victoria was among the last Australian jurisdictions to abolish the offence — which Aboriginal people were disproportionately policed by — 30 years after the 1991 Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody called for the reform.

The government committed to the change after the 2017 death in custody of Yorta Yorta woman Tanya Day, who was asleep on a train and arrested for public drunkenness.

She hit her head in her cell but police did not notice a lump on her head for three hours, when they called an ambulance. Ms Day had a bleed on her brain and died more than two weeks later of a cerebral haemorrhage.

The organisation responsible for outreach for the general population in Melbourne, as well as the Collingwood site, cohealth, said the community health organisation would continue to be a provider under the new framework.

"Over the next year, cohealth is working with government, Aboriginal leadership, staff, and service users to strengthen public intoxication health services, including transitioning sobering services for the general population from the centralised Collingwood site to more local options connected to health services by mid-2027," a spokesman said.

"A health-based response to public intoxication saves lives, improves health and safety outcomes, and benefits individuals and the broader community."

While the public intoxication charge was abolished on November 7, 2023, the Collingwood sobering centre was not ready in time and opened later that month, adding to questions about the state's readiness.

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • The transition to localised and integrated service delivery will be completed by mid-2027.

    Probable · En quelques mois

  • The state opposition will continue to criticise the government's handling of public intoxication services.

    Très probable · En quelques mois

Questions ouvertes

  • Which specific services will take responsibility for supporting people who are drunk in public under the new framework?
  • What will be the exact nature of the 'localised and integrated service delivery'?
  • How will the reduced funding impact the quality and accessibility of the ongoing outreach and localised services?
  • What is the rationale behind closing a centre that provides a health-based response to public intoxication, despite its stated benefits?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by ABC Top Stories.

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