Pubdate: Tue, 06 Apr 2004 Source: Times Leader (PA) Copyright: 2004 The Times Leader Contact: http://www.leader.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/933 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) MASS. OFFICIAL BACKS NEEDLE EXCHANGE PLAN SPRINGFIELD, Mass. -- A city councilor whose vote helped defeat a city needle exchange program six years ago now says he backs the proposal and will reintroduce it to the council. City Councilor Bud L. Williams had initially supported a needle exchange in 1998. But after a referendum showed voter opposition to the plan, he changed his mind, resulting in a 5-4 vote to defeat the proposal. Now, Williams said he has changed his mind again, and will reintroduce the plan to the city council. "I am not supporting drug use, I want to make that clear, but I just feel we have to exhaust all possibilities," he told The Republican newspaper of Springfield. "If you can save one person, it's worth it. I've said it many times." The City Council Committee on Civil Rights and Race Relations, which Williams chairs, planned to discuss needle exchanges on Monday at City Hall. Needle exchanges provide clean syringes to addicts who inject drugs intravenously. Advocates say distributing clean needles helps prevent the spread of AIDS. Opponents say it encourages illegal drug use. In Massachusetts, it is illegal to have a hypodermic needle or syringe without a prescription. The Legislature amended that law in 1993 to allow pilot needle exchange programs in Boston, Cambridge, Northampton and Provincetown. Helen R. Caulton-Harris, director of Springfield's Health and Human Services Department, said needle exchanges can help fight AIDS. "Needle exchange should be administered as a part of a comprehensive opportunity to educate," she said. "We shouldn't see needle exchange by itself as a panacea to solve the HIV problem in the city of Springfield." Six people in every 1,000 in Springfield were infected with HIV or AIDS as of January. That's up slightly from 5.5 per 1,000 in July 1992, she said. Of those, 44 percent reported injecting drugs, Caulton-Harris said. Mayor Charles V. Ryan said he opposes such programs because they run counter to drug prevention efforts and because of potential liability for the city. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl