The commissioner who led the inquiry, Professor Dan Howard, said he was distressed by the effects of the NSW government's "hard-line'' approach to drugs.
"I am still haunted by seeing some (Indigenous) elders in tears explaining the lack of action and the problems that family members and members of their communities have had," he said on Thursday.
The $10.8 million inquiry received more than 250 submissions and handed down more than 100 recommendations in January 2020.
Two months later the government rejected five key recommendations, including pill testing and the scrapping of drug sniffer dogs, but promised a "whole government" response.
No recommendations have been followed up on and Prof Howard says he hasn't been contacted by the government, except when a minister told him "something will happen soon''.
Deputy Premier Paul Toole told a budget estimates hearing on Wednesday he understood there would be a legislative response in the remaining seven sitting weeks of parliament this year.
The legislation is being led by Attorney-General Mark Speakman, who could not provide details.
"The NSW government's response to the ice inquiry and associated funding remains under active consideration," a spokesperson for Mr Speakman told AAP.
The NSW Bar Association says there are four "no-brainer" recommendations that need to be enacted as soon as possible.
"The first is a statewide de-penalisation scheme," president Gaby Bashir said.
"So instead of .... clogging up the court system, users of small portions of drugs are going to have mandatory health interventions."
The inquiry found almost 8000 people come through NSW jails each year with ice addiction.
Among other recommendations is a partnership with First Nations communities in developing "culturally competent drug treatment services".
"Aboriginal people are targeted and ultimately bear the brunt of heavy penalties and imprisonment," Aboriginal Legal Service chief executive Kelly Warner said.
"Building a fair and evidence-based drug policy for NSW will contribute to closing the gap in imprisonment rates."