The incidence of alcohol-related violence fell in Queensland’s key nightlife areas while business continued to grow after the Queensland Government’s Tackling Alcohol Fuelled Violence (TAFV) policy was introduced, independent research has found.
A study led by Deakin University in collaboration with Õ¬Äе¼º½, Curtin University and others published today in a Special Section of the Drug and Alcohol Review, shows significant reductions in alcohol-related harm in the three years following the 2016 introduction of trading hour restrictions, and two years after the introduction of ID scanners – the two main levers expected to have the greatest impact.
In 15 key nightlife precincts or Safe Night Precincts (SNPs) – such as Fortitude Valley, the Gold Coast and Cairns – serious assaults reduced between 3am and 6am, with a two-hour reduction in alcohol sales times and when ID scanners were implemented.
Lead investigator Professor Peter Miller from Deakin’s School of Psychology said the most pronounced effect was in Fortitude Valley, which accounts for a large proportion of the nightlife-related population and harm in Queensland.
“The substantial reduction in serious assaults, the most reliable measure of assault, suggests a positive and ongoing impact from the TAFV legislation,” Professor Miller said.
The study also found significant reductions in ambulance attendances, including a 36 per cent drop between 3am and 6am in Fortitude Valley – smaller changes were seen in Surfers Paradise and some SNPs showed no change.
Professor Miller said the data showed the continued benefits of modest regulation of trading hours and monitoring in the night-time economy.
“Importantly, there was little evidence that the restrictions negatively affected the pre-COVID night-time economy, especially once the government made changes to scanning practices following the 2-year report,” Professor Miller said.
“Tourism continued to grow across the initial study period and the three-year results showed that business, including live music, the number of venues and the number of people attending key nightspots continued to grow across the state.”
The results mirror research by the Lord Mayors’ Council of Australia which reported that Queensland had the country’s third largest core night-time economy across all key metrics, and it was growing faster than in Victoria and New South Wales.
Study co-investigator Õ¬Äе¼º½’s said the results showed the number of live music venues and performances in Fortitude Valley were unaffected by the TAFV Policy.
“There remains scope to further reduce harm by placing modest regulations on casinos, closing venues when liquor service ceases and ensuring venues continue to comply with the existing legislation,” Dr Ferris said.
Associate Professor Michael Livingston from Curtin University said the project reflected a growing recognition from government that large-scale, independent evaluations were crucial to inform policy.
“These findings will continue to inform policy across the country,” Dr Livingston said.
The Queensland Government has adopted many of the recommendations in the two-year report, noting that changes to patron-banning legislation may provide further benefit but will require further evaluation to assess longer-term impact.
A study was published in a Special Section of the (DOI: 10.1111/dar.13181).
Media: Professor Peter Miller, peter.miller@deakin.edu.au, 0429 024 844; Pauline Braniff, Deakin University Media, pauline.braniff@deakin.edu.au, +61 3 5227 3586, 0418 361 890, @; Kim Lyell, Õ¬Äе¼º½ Communications, communications@uq.edu.au, 0429 056 139.