Residents living near the Thistle safe drug consumption facility in Glasgow pay only a TENTH of the bill for removing discarded needles after it opened than they did before it opened to further expose BBC Scotland’s bias by selection

Professor John Robertson OBA

Thanks to L for providing this convincing and objective evidence, that Thistle facility has not increased the number of dangerous discarded needles in the surrounding area. They write:

I emailed you in June to advise you of the impact the Thistle appears to be having on the flat. As I previously stated the main chat on the WhatsApp group for owners and tenants  was about  discarded needles , drug paraphernalia, drug dealing and anti social behaviour. 

You will recall that we spent £2,500 for the 6 months prior to the Thistle opening too pay for discarded needles and drug paraphernalia etc to be removed. I now have the invoice for the period January 2025- August 2025 which backs up the chat from the WhatsApp group and the bill for removing discarded needles etc is £240 for 2 occasions. Way down from £2,500 and on 18 occasions.

The only thing in the area that has changed is that the Thistle has opened and in my opinion this has confirmed that apart from reducing drug related deaths etc the area aground the flat has been cleaned up with the area much safer now and less police time being taken up. 

In June 2025, I wrote:

A source with a flat in a block 10-15 minutes from the the United Kingdom’s first Safer Drug Consumption Facility, The Thistle, in Glasgow, has a very different story to tell from that gathered by BBC Scotland, based on one group of residents, suggesting a counter-intuitive increase in drug taking and anti-social behaviour near the facility.

Multiple research studies across Europe have clearly demonstrated significant reductions in drug deaths and crime around more than 300 such facilities, over the last 7 years: https://gov.wales/sites/default/files/publications/2019-01/180320atisn12038doc2_0.pdf

You have to wonder just how BBC Scotland managed to find evidence contrary to these multiple research reports. Makes you wonder if they have a political agenda and complete disregard for the truth.

In July 2025, from US-based international news agency CNN:

“We’ve had almost 2,500 injections inside the facility,” Dr. Saket Priyadarshi, the clinical lead of the Thistle, told a CNN team who visited the facility in early June. “That’s 2,500 less injections in the community, in parks, alleyways, car parks.”

The Scottish government told CNN that the service has already delivered results in terms of public health.

“Through the ability of staff to respond quickly in the event of an overdose, the Thistle service has already saved lives,” Scottish health secretary Neil Gray said. The service, he said, is “helping to protect people against blood-borne viruses and taking used needles off the street.

The idea itself is not new.

The world’s first safer drug consumption room opened in Switzerland in 1986 -– a clinical counterpoint to street-level chaos. Since then, the model has spread across Europe, from Portugal and the Netherlands to Germany, Denmark and Spain, and beyond to Canada and New York City.

Still, resistance remains. CNN spoke to several people in the area who were concerned about the facility’s opening and said it had encouraged more drug users to come to the area in the six months since opening.

Others, however, told CNN that they had noticed there were fewer needles and less discarded drug paraphernalia on the ground since the clinic opened.

https://www.google.com/url?q=https://edition.cnn.com/2025/07/11/uk/glasgow-uk-first-supervised-drug-consumption-facility-gbr-cmd&source=gmail&ust=1752386722893000&usg=AOvVaw2ghQXPfLVEPt7vXCN-UeJ9

Regular critic, herself in recovery, Annemarie Ward, does get several paragraphs but what’s different here, to most Scottish media coverage, is the reference to Europe-wide research in favour of these facilities, an expert medic and the SNP health secretary being able to provide the numbers and no space for the likes of Jackie Baillie to muddy the waters.

Most striking is that CNN have found some locals saying there are fewer needles lying around. You have to wonder how they did that when BBC Scotland, STV, the Herald, the Scotsman and the Daily Record can only ever find folk saying the opposite. Does this mean that the CNN journalists are better or worse at their jobs than their Scottish equivalents?

5 thoughts on “Residents living near the Thistle safe drug consumption facility in Glasgow pay only a TENTH of the bill for removing discarded needles after it opened than they did before it opened to further expose BBC Scotland’s bias by selection

  1. I love the line when describing BBC Scotland actions “Makes you wonder if they have a political agenda and complete disregard for the truth“.

    Yes, its the truth that BBC Scotland cannot stomach. I have little doubt that discarded needles are still an issue. I would hope that most of that is down to educating users and encouraging the safe use of The Thistle.

    Mind you, is that not what the BBC are actually supposed to doing like “Ambitious campaigns addressing societal needs and promoting behaviour change”, maybe that comes after trying to blame the SNP at every turn right enough 🙂

    Liked by 3 people

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