Pubdate: Wed, 27 Oct 2004 Source: Jersey Journal, The (NJ) Copyright: 2004 The Jersey Journal Contact: http://www.nj.com/jjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2699 Author: Ken Thorbourne, Journal staff writer Note: The Associated Press contributed to this report. Cited: Hyacinth AIDS Foundation http://www.hyacinth.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) NEEDLE EXCHANGE ORDER IS SIGNED Jersey City Offered Weapon to Fight Crisis of Rising HIV Figures With the HIV infection rates running high in the state's urban centers, Gov. James E. McGreevey yesterday signed an executive order giving three cities the opportunity to establish needle-exchange programs for drug users. Atlantic City and Camden - cities that already passed local laws to start needle exchanges, but whose efforts were stalled without legislative authority - were named as two of the participating municipalities, and a third city would be eligible as well. Four of the candidates in Jersey City's mayoral election Tuesday - acting Mayor L. Harvey Smith, former Councilwoman Willie Flood, Assemblyman Louis Manzo and Ward C Councilman Steve Lipski - said they favored a needle-exchange program. A fifth candidate, Councilman-at-Large Jerramiah Healy, said he does not favor it. Under McGreevey's executive order, cities with the highest prevalence of HIV due to injection drug use would be eligible to start a needle exchange program if they met two criteria: municipal commitment and an ability to demonstrate to the state Department of Health and Senior Services that participants in the program would have sufficient access to health care facilities, social services and drug treatment. There are an estimated 28,000 injection drug users in New Jersey, according to the state Department of Health and Senior Services, which says 51 percent of the state's 64,219 HIV/AIDS infections are related to injection drug use. From 2000 to 2002, the number of infected Hudson residents went up by 14 percent, from 3,548 to 4,076, according to an analysis of federal health statistics by the Hyacinth AIDS Foundation, a statewide service organization with an office in Jersey City. According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, 44 percent of all HIV/AIDS cases reported in Hudson since the epidemic began were traced to intravenous drug use. "We have to do anything we can do to fight drugs," said acting Mayor Smith. "I want to look at the bill. I'm in favor of needle exchanges." Manzo said he helped hold up a bill to establish needle exchange programs until more money was put in for drug treatment centers. "I held it up until they added $10 million for additional treatment and bed space," said Manzo, who said if is elected mayor he would establish a needle exchange program if the City Council voted in favor of the idea. "We are 16,000 beds short on our demand (for drug treatment) in Jersey City." In an "ideal world," Lipski said he would be against the idea. "But research shows it would help reduce contagious and infectious disease," he said. Flood also expressed support. "We need clean needles," said Flood. "I'm favor of it." But a spokeswoman for Healy, Maria Pignataro, said the councilman would not be in favor. "He is all for helping people with drug addition, but as a former prosecutor and judge, he doesn't believe needle exchange is the answer," said Pignataro. "He thinks it is treating a symptom and not treating the root of the problem." Axel Torresmarrero, director of public policy for the Hyacinth AIDS Foundation, said he was elated about McGreevey's executive order, but said action could have been taken sooner had the debate not gotten skewed. "During his campaign, the governor said he was in favor (of needle exchange)," said Torresmarrero. "In New Jersey, it is not a public health conversation. We analyze it from a criminal and drug use perspective. In terms of epidemiology, it made no sense to not have needle exchange." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake