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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NJ: Cities Apply To Start Needle Program
Title:US NJ: Cities Apply To Start Needle Program
Published On:2007-05-13
Source:Courier-Post (Cherry Hill, NJ)
Fetched On:2008-08-17 03:01:14
CITIES APPLY TO START NEEDLE PROGRAM

TRENTON -- Five of the 12 eligible cities have applied to the state
Department of Health and Senior Services to begin pilot needle
exchange programs.

Up to six municipalities could receive permission to start needle
exchange programs -- hoped to curb the spread of HIV/AIDS and other
diseases among intravenous drug users -- provided they exceed certain
statistics: 350 residents with HIV/AIDS and a prevalence rate
attributable to drug use of more than 300 per 100,000 residents.

Of the 12 cities that meet the criteria, Camden and Atlantic City,
which have long sought exchange programs, applied, along with Newark,
Paterson and Trenton. Asbury Park, New Brunswick, Plainfield, East
Orange, Elizabeth, Irvington and Jersey City did not.

"It's been a battle, so we're glad to see it," said Ron Cash,
director of Atlantic City's Health Department, which plans to provide
needle exchanges through vans and fixed sites.

The law took a contentious and uncertain route. In 2004, then-Gov.
James E. McGreevey signed an executive order permitting pilot
programs in three cities, but a month before programs were to start
in Camden and Atlantic City, an appeals court ruled the spread of
AIDS was not an emergency and said exchange programs needed
legislative approval.

Despite some delays in the Senate, where Sen. Ronald Rice, D-Essex,
was a staunch critic with a key committee vote, the measure was
signed into law in December. By the end of the summer there could be
up to five programs in New Jersey -- the last state to have any sort
of needle exchange program.

Camden's program will begin once the state approves its program,
which is expected to occur by the end of June.

"It's going to be crucial to saving lives of injection drug users,"
said Jose Quann, program coordinator of the Camden Area Health
Education Center. "It's going to affect the community at large where
contaminated needles wouldn't be discarded all over the city.
Injection drug users will have access to sterile syringes that they
might not get infected or infect their loved ones."

Critics, however, say the programs is akin to government-sanctioned
drug use and that taxpayer dollars should only be used for treatment
and recovery. To garner support, lawmakers tacked on $10 million for
addiction services as part as the exchange legislation.

"Most cities understand that the exchange of free needles is a
national movement to legalize drugs, but more importantly, they know
they bring about more problems through crime, gang banging and other
kinds of criminal justice problems," said Rice, a former Newark police officer.

John Tomicki, of the Citizens Against Needle Exchange, said needle
exchanges elsewhere have failed. "Tragically, all we can do is watch
history repeat itself," said Tomicki, who works on a number of
socially conservative causes.

The issue of whether needle exchange will reduce the spread of
disease without increasing crime is disputed.

Roseanne Scotti, director of the Drug Policy Alliance, said the
programs will work in New Jersey without the rise in crime that
critics predict. Some cities that didn't apply are waiting to see how
the programs do before starting ones, Scotti said.

"It's a process that takes time," Scotti said. "Atlantic City and
Camden spent a couple years -- while they were advocating for this --
educating their city officials and educating the staff at the
organizations that would do this. . . . I certainly think there are
other cities that are interested and that they will just apply late
and the state will hopefully grant them some leeway there. We're
talking about saving lives here."

If New Jersey's pilot programs work, the Health Commissioner will
report to the Legislature in five years whether the program should
become permanent and possibly expanded.
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