Pubdate: Sat, 15 May 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) STATE SENATOR TO INTRODUCE BILL ALLOWING A.C. NEEDLE EXCHANGE TRENTON - An Essex County senator will introduce legislation Monday that allows interested municipalities, such as Atlantic City, to set up state-supervised needle-exchange programs. Sen. Nia Gill, a Democrat, decided to sponsor the bill after the state attorney general and Atlantic County prosecutor ruled Atlantic City did not have the authority to help drug addicts exchange used needles for clean ones. The legislation requires the involvement of health professionals and access to drug treatment and counseling. Gill's support is a boon for needle-exchange supporters because of her influence in the Legislature's Black Caucus. When a bill to decriminalize needle possession was introduced last year, it was another black Democratic senator from Essex County, Ronald Rice, who voiced objections that helped convince sponsors to withdraw the bill. Another black senator from Essex County, Sharpe James, of Newark, also opposes needle exchange. "I will have to bring them all on board," Gill said. "The community that's dying looks like them, and we have the statistics to show whatever we're doing, it's not effective." In Atlantic City, one in every 32 black residents is infected with HIV, the highest percentage in the state, and more than 60 percent contracted the disease through shared needles. Atlantic City officials maintain a 1999 amendment grants them authority to set up needle exchange programs. But Mayor Lorenzo Langford, speaking on the subject for the first time Friday, acknowledged the city is not prepared to move as quickly as it would like because of the rulings from Atlantic County Prosecutor Jeffrey S. Blitz and Attorney General Peter Harvey. "We're not interested in getting in a fight with the attorney general or with the prosecutor, but we are committed to doing what we have to do to protect this community," Langford said. "Right now, we're reviewing our options, but we still think we want to move forward." Gill said her bill will simply "clarify" Atlantic City's right to establish a needle exchange by adding additional language that makes the law clearer. She said the HIV statistics in New Jersey, particularly among women and children, are too powerful for the Legislature to ignore. New Jersey has the highest proportion of women infected with HIV in the country and the third highest pediatric HIV rate. "Those are devastating numbers," Gill said. "This is a health issue. If a municipality feels conditions have reached epidemic proportions, they should be allowed to do (needle exchange.)" Opponents argue such programs condone drug use. New Jersey is one of five states that require a prescription to purchase a syringe. Along with Delaware, it is one of two states that do not allow needle exchange programs in its inner cities. If the legislation stalls, Temple University Law School professor Scott Burris, considered a leading authority on needle exchange, has said he would represent Atlantic City in court. "I look forward to finding out exactly what legal objection the attorney general has," Burris said. "The statute and its legislative history clearly show that local governments are exempt from the law against distributing syringes." Atlantic City nurse Carole Ceanfaglione, who lost her son to injection-related HIV, said she could not understand why anyone would challenge the city's right to provide a life-saving program. "So many people have lost their lives to this," she said. "Not just people who are drug users themselves, but also women who have been infected by their drug-using partners and babies who have gotten the virus from their mothers. We have to do something to protect people." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake