Pubdate: Thu, 07 Dec 2000 Source: Bay Area Reporter (CA) Website: http://www.ebar.com/ Contact: 2000 The Bay Area Reporter / B.A.R. Author: Tonne Serah, Ph.D. Cited: http://www.dancesafe.org (DanceSafe) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Note: "Tonne Serah" is a San Francisco activist, author, and club boy. He writes PartyWise, a harm reduction column at www.klubz.com. TIME TO TALK ABOUT WHAT WE DROP It's 3 a.m. and the sour smell of vomit is definitely harshing my buzz. But this is not the back room of a porno theater or a doorway on Sixth Street. This is San Francisco's biggest gay dance club. Already I've seen one friend dragged out unconscious because of a drug overdose and watched two people throwing up for the same reason. Not in the bathroom. On the dance floor. Ambulances pulling up to clubs and circuit parties has become a routine sight in San Francisco. Large venues deal with 12 or more medical emergencies in a single night. And while circuit boys are passing out on the dance floor, others are being led away in handcuffs. It takes a lot of denial to ignore the fact that we have a problem. In response, the San Francisco Police Department has been waging a war on drugs in the South of Market area. Clubs have been forced to adopt security worthy of a police state. Some have been reluctant to call ambulances for fear that the police will use 911 records to revoke their permits. None of this comes as a surprise. Critics have being pointing out the failings of the war on drugs for years. Our jails are filled with casual drug users. Ever harsher penalties have driven the distribution of drugs into the hands of international syndicates. And as drug seizures reduce supply, fake and sometimes dangerous substances are made to meet demand. (DanceSafe, a nonprofit organization that tests ecstasy pills, finds that nearly one-third contain something besides ecstasy.) There is an alternative. Called harm reduction, it's based on a simple principle. If we can't eliminate drug use, then let's do what we can to reduce the harm associated with it. Harm reduction means fact-based drug education, including information on how to reduce risks, not "Reefer Madness" fear tactics that breed disbelief and distrust. Harm reduction means peer education - people from your community sharing what they've learned about drugs and not judgmental authorities telling you how to live your life. Harm reduction involves the health and safety of everyone who loves to dance. This includes free earplugs, drinking water, and proper ventilation in dance venues, and staff prepared to deal with medical emergencies. These are not new ideas. Safe sex education and needle exchange, which began in the GLBT community, are models of harm reduction. But when it comes to reducing harm from drugs, ravers and organizations like DanceSafe have been leading the way, providing on-site drug education, safety information, and pill testing at dance music events. Here in San Francisco, a few steps toward harm reduction at clubs and parties have been taken. Earlier this year, the Board of Supervisors adopted measures requiring large clubs to provide free drinking water and prohibiting the SFPD from using reports of ambulance calls to revoke permits. This fall, volunteers from the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, DanceSafe, and klubz.com began distributing harm reduction information and ecstasy test kits to club patrons South of Market and in the Castro. But much more needs to be done. Above all, we need to overcome the climate of fear and denial about drug use at clubs and parties. It's time to talk about what we drop. That's why the Stop AIDS Project, together with DanceSafe, the Harm Reduction Coalition, the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, klubz.com, BarsToClubs.com, and Gus Presents, is sponsoring Circuit Time, a community forum to talk about why we love to dance and how we can stay safe and healthy when we party. It's a chance to ask questions about drugs like ecstasy, GHB, K, and speed, and to learn about harm reduction, in a nonjudgmental setting. Come join us tonight (Thursday, December 7) for the Circuit Time forum from 8 to 10 p.m. at the Women's Building (3543 18th Street at Valencia). We need to take care of ourselves and each other. As Madonna sings, "Music makes the people come together." Let's make those words come true. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk