Report Shows Harsh Regulations On NSW Music Festivals Were Ineffective

A new report which reviews the restrictions placed on music festivals by the NSW government shows little minimization in the number of serious drug-related presentations at music festivals, questioning the efficacy of the new laws. 

Photo Credit: The Music Network

To give you some background, following a series of drug-related deaths at music festivals in the summer of 2018 to 2019 the NSW Berejiklian government implemented a series of costly regulations such as increased licencing and policing causing many festivals to cancel their events for good. This included the cancellation of Mountain Sounds and Psyfari festivals which caused an uproar in the music festival community with many calling it Glady’s “war on festivals”.

In November 2019 the NSW government introduced the Music Festivals Act 2019 which was “introduced to ensure additional oversight of high-risk festivals, and provide support to these festivals, to achieve the shared aim of safer events in NSW,” according to this new report that has been released.

Photo Credit: The New York Times

The Music Festivals Act 2019 required “high risk” festivals to prepare a Safety Management Plan (SMP) to be approved before the event takes place, complete an incident register, and hold briefings for health service providers. In the Safety Management Plan festivals are required to implement harm reduction areas, safety zones, and other measures to ensure harm minimization for patrons at festivals.

So after uprooting the music festival community in NSW by rushing into place new rules and making it almost impossible to hold a festival with the increased costs, regulations, and requirements, the government has concluded that their regulations weren’t all that effective in minimizing the number of drug-related incidences…wasn’t that the whole point? I can see many in the music community seething in their seats right now.

Photo Credit: Sydney Morning Herald

The information in the report was found by the NSW Ministry of Health gathered from nine “high risk” festivals that took place between November 2019 and April 2020 with three being cancelled by the bushfires or the Coronavirus pandemic. The report does stress that there were limited festivals during this time due to the pandemic therefore, “the review found it was too early to draw any definitive conclusions”.

Despite the limited number of festivals the information still shows that the number of serious drug-related presentations either remained the same or lessened. It’s clear that the new regulations and requirements haven’t made a considerable difference to incidences involving drugs.

High-risk festivals data from review

It’s unclear whether this report will make any difference to the music festival landscape in NSW as the information is compelling but somewhat unreliable due to the pandemic that has wiped out many festivals this year.

“Continuing to gather data over a longer time…would provide more robust evidence in relation to the effectiveness of SMPs,” reads the report.

Photo Credit: Newcastle Herald

The report doesn’t change the common feeling in the music community that these new regulations and requirements are both damaging to music festivals and the future of live events in the state. Following the announcement of the new laws and regulations in NSW, many festivals and musicians spoke out about the decision highlighting the adverse effects it would have on the industry.

“I am saying now, Bluesfest will leave NSW. We have no choice; it’s a matter of survival. Will the last festival to leave NSW please turn out the light of culture in this soon to be barren state?” said Bluesfest Byron Bay Festival Director Peter Noble.

Bluesfest Byron Bay. Photo Credit: Music Feeds

 

Here’s what Aussie legends Peking Duk had to say,

AFA board member and Fuzzy Events Managing Director Adelle Robinson also claimed that the regulations were “too rushed and without enough consultation or consideration given to the impacts on the industry as a whole or the operational capacity each government branch has to implement these changes.”

The report is good news though for those in the community that can finally say “I told you so” to Gladys and her “war on festivals”, however it still highlights uncertainties in the industry. Hopefully one day the government will work more closely with music festivals to produce a more informed and inclusive solution to drug-related incidences at festivals.

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Live Musicmusic festivalsGladys BerejiklianDon't Kill Live MusicGladys War on Music
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