Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jul 2004 Source: Press of Atlantic City, The (NJ) Copyright: 2004 South Jersey Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/29 Author: Pete McAleer, Statehouse Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) N.J. STUDIES BOSTON NEEDLE EXCHANGE State Officials Examine Program, Seek to Change Needle-Possession Laws BOSTON - You won't find La Grange Street on any of the maps handed out to delegates at the Democratic National Convention. The narrow one-way street, in a neighborhood once referred to as "the combat zone," remains one of the few streets left unclean for this week's big event. But La Grange Street is where two of New Jersey's most prominent delegates went Tuesday morning. Far removed from the hotel conferences and open-bar receptions that dominate the typical convention schedule, they stood in the back of an old bread truck parked across the street from two rundown strip bars, the Glass Slipper and Good Times. As heroin addicts stepped inside the truck to exchange used needles for clean ones, Assembly Majority Leader Joe Roberts, D-Camden, and state Sen. Nia Gill, D-Newark, observed and asked lots of questions. The two legislators will need all the information they can gather in their effort to change the needle-possession law in a state that, along with Delaware, holds the toughest restrictions in the nation. For more than a decade, New Jersey's Legislature has avoided the mere discussion of needle exchange as a tool to lower the state's high rate of HIV and AIDS. The program's prospects have looked so dim, Atlantic City and Camden - two cities fighting AIDS epidemics - are seeking to start their own programs in defiance of the state attorney general. In Atlantic City, where one in 40 residents has the HIV virus, Mayor Lorenzo Langford's administration is preparing to challenge the state's needle-possession law in court. Roberts' advocacy offers new hope for needle-exchange supporters. Considered Trenton's most powerful legislator by many, Roberts has made the issue his summer project. He wants to get a needle-exchange bill to the governor's desk by the end of September. "It's going to be a significant pull," Roberts said. "It's an easy issue to demagogue." Opponents in the Legislature argue needle exchange condones drug use and they dispute the accuracy of federal health department surveys that show the programs reduce the spread of AIDS. Although Gov. James E. McGreevey officially supports a hospital-based needle exchange, his closest advisers have warned him the issue is too politically divisive to tackle right now. Although Roberts' plan is still in the crafting stage, he plans to introduce two bills aimed at preventing addicts from sharing needles. One would set up needle-exchange programs in municipalities that approve them. It would include several components - among them a fixed exchange site, a mobile health-care van and a hospital-linked program - - that would allow addicts to not only exchange needles but access medical treatment and counseling. A second bill would allow those 18 and older to purchase a limited number of clean needles without a prescription, provided pharmacists distribute information about treatment. New Jersey, Massachusetts, Delaware and Pennsylvania remain the only four states that require prescriptions to purchase needles, although Massachusetts and Pennsylvania offer needle-exchange programs in their inner cities. In recent weeks, Roberts and a staff member have traveled to New York and Philadelphia to observe needle-exchange programs there. Roseanne Scotti, director of the New Jersey Drug Policy Alliance, said Roberts' support adds new excitement to a battle she began fighting several years ago. She went to New York and Philadelphia with Roberts and came away impressed with his knowledge. "He asked some of the best question anyone's ever asked about needle exchange," Scotti said. "He understands just how serious and important it is. He can come up with a solution that is politically acceptable and still a legitimate public-health intervention." The Boston trip provided Roberts insight into a political dynamic comparable to New Jersey. Boston Mayor Thomas Menino remains a vocal advocate for changing the state's prescription laws, even though the Legislature declines to act. In New Jersey, the state Legislature has ignored resolutions supporting needle-exchange laws passed by city councils in Atlantic City, Camden and New Brunswick. "That tells me that as we move into this area, we have to respect local officials who know their community best," Roberts said. "If you have a situation where local officials in two communities are prepared to take matters into their own hands because people are dying, the Legislature needs to find a way to solve the problem." At its core, needle exchange is a dispute between the law-enforcement and health communities. Even in Boston, where needle-exchange participants are given identification cards to protect them from arrests for possession of drug paraphernalia, some police officers still follow participants, search them and even charge them with crimes. The charges are usually thrown out in court, but they can serve to discourage participants, said Adam Butler, one of the coordinators for Boston's 10-year-old needle-exchange program. "We're in the middle of two wars," Butler said. "The HIV war and the drug war." The same battle continues in New Jersey, where Health Commissioner Clifton Lacy pushes for new needle laws and Attorney General Peter C. Harvey opposes any changes. If the health side is to win out, law enforcement will need to be persuaded to view needle exchange differently. "Our job is to be respectful of law enforcement but redefine this as a health issue," Roberts said. Roberts' guest on the trip to LaGrange Street offers proof that minds can be changed. Gill, one of the leaders of the Legislature's Black Caucus, opposed needle exchange for years because she thought drug users would congregate in urban areas and interfere with economic development in inner cities. Gill said she changed her mind after looking at the statistics. New Jersey's HIV rate ranks in the top three in the nation for women and children, with shared needles identified as the root cause for almost half of the state's HIV cases. A few months before Roberts got involved, Gill introduced a bill that would allow municipalities to adopt their own needle-exchange programs. She now looks at such programs as a way to save lives. "This is a policy of containment for the spread of disease," Gill said. "I learned not to look at it in an emotional way." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake