The word on the street at the moment suggests that there is
a turf war going down for the control of the drugs market in the North West of
Dumfries. There are two gangs fighting it out and both have travelled many miles
to wage their war. Maybe it is sensible to avoid too many specifics here. Let’s
say that these charming individuals hail from two of Britain’s great port
cities which once upon a time provided the gateway to our Empire; cities which
have now hit harder times. One lies some 120 miles to the south of Dumfries . The other is 80 miles to the north. I am sure
you get the picture.
The word on the street is that these raiders have turned up
in town with guns and the police are all over the situation like a rash. Let’s
hope so. We’ve had a major drug problem here in Dumfries
for years, but thankfully guns have seldom played any part in proceedings. Long
may that continue.
Much more interesting than the ‘who’ and the ‘how’ is surely
the ‘why?’. Let’s face it, on the surface of things it is a pretty big ‘why?’ Dumfries is anything but a boom town. Once upon a time we
were a thriving market town serving a booming and luxuriant stretch of
productive farmland. Those days are long gone. Unemployment is sky high and
prospects are lower than the Atlantic Trench. Dumfries
is typical of so many towns all across the post industrial western world;
places where coal was once mined or cotton spun or steel smelted or ships
built. Over a span of a hundred years or so, all such activity moved away to the
East and these places have become pretty well pointless with vast Tesco stores
filling the space where factories and coal mines and ship yards once provided a
living to thousands. Nowadays the public sector and benefits drive what is left
of the economy and of course both are being cut to the bone.
North West Dumfries is home to four sprawling areas of what
we now call ‘social housing’. Around 20,000 people live there. The Government
up in Edinburgh
considers the area to be ‘less favoured’ and therefore eligible for additional
financial support. Many locals love to tell war stories about how bad things
are, but all this really goes to show is that they have never visited the likes
of Croxteth or Moss Side or Peckham.
A fictional Dumfries
provides the backdrop for several of my novels and much of the excitement is to
be found in a scheme that I call Sunnybank Estate. There has always been a
degree of debate about which of the four schemes of NW Dumfries is the real
life Sunnybank. Time and again I have pointed out that Sunnybank is entirely a
figment of my imagination, but nobody seems much interested in listening. In my
stories, drugs being used, abused and dealt tends to play a pretty large role.
This is hardly surprising as I have spent the last ten years of my life at First
Base which has provided a frontline view of the desperate underworld that
illegal drugs inevitably creates.
For years the local wisdom has been adamant that NW Dumfries
is full of ‘junkies’. This is unduly harsh as it suggests that people who are born
and raised in the four schemes are somehow genetically engineered to become
depended on heroin’s warm embrace. This of course is the very worst of
prejudiced nonsense. However there can be no denying the fact that there are an
unusually high number of drug addicts to be found in the area. The reason for
this is down to stuff that Adam Smith would have been more than familiar with: good
old fashioned supply and demand.
Over the last 15 years or so, the local cops have had a
number of highly successful clampdowns in many of the region’s smaller towns.
Dealers have been rounded up and locked up thanks to a number of well
co-ordinated dawn raids. A few years ago ‘Operation Emperor’ rendered Stranraer
virtually drug free. Not a single dealer was left to ‘punt kit’ once the doors
had been knocked off their hinges at five in the morning. But that was only
half the story. At the time of ‘Emperor’ there were about 600 heroin users in
Stranraer and they were all left hanging on the wire and desperate for a hit.
Some rattled and gave up. Some were slotted onto the Methadone programme. A
majority, maybe 400 of so, migrated east to the nearest place where heroin was
still on sale; Dumfries .
They came to town and declared themselves homeless and spent
time in the hostels. Eventually the Section 5 Referral rule meant that they
were offered tenancies and these tenancies were invariably to be found in the
four schemes of North West Dumfries. Over the years the same thing happened
several more times as successful police clampdowns created new migrations.
So, yes. There are indeed a higher than normal number of
drug addicts to be found in NW Dumfries, but most were not born and bred. So
how many? A rough guess would suggest somewhere in the region of 750. Most are
now on the Methadone programme and they have been on the green stuff for a
while. They don’t tend to commit so much crime as they did a few years ago for
the simple reason that crime is harder to commit. There are many fewer shops to
shoplift these days and ones who still hang on have sheets full of pictures
highlighting the faces of those with multiple convictions for drug related
theft. The harsh truth is that the 750 are not as young as they once were.
Heroin addiction is very much yesterday’s news. The last couple of generations
of youngsters have been way too smart to get suckered into a life of endless
rattling and drudgery. Those who are left on the books of the drugs trade are
in their thirties and forties now. Their health is poor and fading. Most are
mere shells of the people they once were. They hobble around with leg ulcers
and fade quietly away with Hepatitis C. They lack the energy for a crime wave.
In their own words, most have become ‘Giro Junkies’. They drift through empty
day after empty day care of high doses of Methadone and daytime TV, and once a
fortnight they treat themselves to two or three ‘bags’ of smack when their
fairy godmother in the Department of Work and Pensions drops £120 of so into
their bank accounts.
So why on earth would two aspiring gangs from far away have
any interest in travelling so far to fight it out for the franchise to sell
this group of lost souls their fortnightly trip to oblivion?
I reckon the answer might well be found in the new Universal
Credit which is set to be trialled here in the autumn. Universal Credit is very
much the love child of many bright young things who took the journey from
public school to Oxford
and a shining degree in PPE. Then it was a couple of years of unpaid bag
carrying for a junior minister or shadow minister. A place in central office
and a seat at the table in the think tanks and focus groups. Next would be the
chance to fight a no hope Parliamentary seat where they could demonstrate an
ability to tow the party line, say the right things, bubble over with
enthusiasm and look good for the cameras. Then at last they were rewarded with
a safe seat in the mother of all Parliaments. This new career path has nothing
to do with any particular party, though Eton
seems to provide an unusually high number of Tory bright young things.
And so they have come up with Universal Credit. Give these
poor people some responsibility they cry. Let them pay their own rent and council
tax bills like other hard working, law abiding citizens. Trust them. Make them
self reliant. Hell, make them like proper Americans with a new ‘can do’
mentality and church for all on a Sunday morning.
Oh dear.
Right now most of the 750 addicts up in NW Dumfries get
their benefits in three separate chunks. £240 a month goes into their bank
account. About £300 a month heads into the bank account of their social
landlord in the form of Housing Benefit to keep a roof over their heads. About
£70 a month or so heads straight into the account of the local council as
Council Tax Benefit.
The recipient therefore only ever gets a chance to spend
£240 of the £610 that is paid out on their behalf.
Well, all of that is about to change and change in a big
way. The bright young things have decided that the best thing for poor people
is if they are given the responsibility to look after their own affairs. To be given the responsibility of paying their own bills. This
is going to raise them up and give them self assurance and enable them to get
jobs and credit cards and spend lots of money on the High St and thereby rescue the country
from its decline.
Dumfries and Galloway has
volunteered itself to be one of the guinea pig regions to see how the brave new
world looks in real time.
Let’s have a look at a few sums. Right now the 750 addicts
of NW Dumfries have £2.16 million a year to spend with the Drugs Trade care of
the DWP. In October that figure is about to grow significantly as the new
Universal Credit will put a further £3.33 million on the table.
It’s a fair chunk of cash. And whenever a chunk of cash like
this comes available for the grabbing, organised crime gangs tend to be pretty
quick off the mark. How many ‘Giro Junkies’ are to be found in the UK as a whole?
A conservative guess would suggest about a quarter of a million and the
majority live in cities where the housing benefits cover much higher rents than
NW Dumfries. Let’s make the maths relatively easy. Let’s assume that the new
Universal Credits will deliver up and additional £500 a month to the ‘Giro
Junkies’ of Britain .
£6000 a year. Multiplied by 250,000.
Oops
We’re talking a cool £1.5 billion and that is a serious
chunk of cash in anyone’s terms. You can get a whole bunch of villas by the sun
kissed waters of the Caribbean with that kind
of cash.
So it kind of looks like we are going to have two trials
running up in NW Dumfries in the autumn.
All those bright young people with their PPE degrees will be watching to
see if the beleaguered poor are transformed into highly motivated go getters
who will set the High St
alight. And the hard bitten execs at the top of the drugs industry will be
finding ways to ensure that every penny of the new money on the table finds its
way into their pockets. If you have watched ‘The Wire’, at this point it is
maybe worth picturing Stringer Bell with calculator in hand and a calculating
look on his face. It’s the Stringer with his glasses on look.
It seems pretty obvious to me who will win out. The guys who
run the drugs trade know exactly how things play out in the schemes and sink
estates of Britain .
Their business model will be magnificently simple.
- Find out exactly how much Universal Credit a punter is going to receive.
- Find out where they live.
- Find out the day when they get paid.
- Give them a credit line up to the amount of cash they will be getting.
- On the day, accompany them to the bank or cash machine and take possession of every penny.
- Beat the living daylights out of anyone who fails to honour their side of the agreement.
Yo String!
Not so very hard is it? The bright young things are about to
give the drugs industry the biggest boost it has had in many years. Organised
crime is good at this stuff. Check out the way the Calabrian Mafia are able to
get millions of Euros out of the EU’s Agricultural Subsidies thanks to some
quick footed bribery and violence. All big chunks of public cash act as a
magnet for the new Mafias and they are hugely adept at latching onto every last
penny. Giving £1.5 million of cold hard cash to people who are addicted to
drugs is almost uniquely idiotic. The phrase ‘taking candy of babies’ springs
to mind.
So who are the victims of the bright young things ande their
Neo Liberal nonsense? Well, first and foremost will be the social landlords who
won’t get the rent paid. Can our local housing associations stand a £3 million drop
in income when 750 of their tenants don’t pay any rent? Doubtful. In time, the
750 will be evicted and they will be denied homeless accommodation as they will
have ‘intentionally’ made themselves homeless. They will have few opportunities
to ‘sofa surf’ as most of those in flats where ‘sofa surfing’ is an option will
have been evicted themselves.
So it will be more people sleeping under bridges and in shop
door ways.
And maybe a few housing associations will go belly up.
And there will be something of a spike in the price of
villas in Antigua .
And those super clever chaps in the City of London will rake in lots of extra commission
fees as they launder the £1.5 billion.
So maybe it isn’t so hard to understand why two gangs from
many miles away are willing to fight it out for the drug market in NW Dumfries
after all.
Oh what a complete and utter bloody mess.
Mark, Jan Needle here - one of your greatest admirers. I want to put this on my Facebook page but I don't know how to. Any help, please?
ReplyDeleteSorry Jan - I have just about managed to work out how to operate this page but my knowledge of all things Facebook is woeful!
ReplyDeleteleft click - highlight the article then copy and then paste it to your 'what's on your mind page - easy done.
ReplyDelete