Pubdate: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA) Copyright: 2006 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Jennifer Moroz, Inquirer Trenton Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) N.J. LEGISLATURE APPROVES PILOT NEEDLE-EXCHANGE PLAN TRENTON - It took more than a decade to muster the votes, but the New Jersey Legislature approved a pilot program yesterday that would allow intravenous drug users to swap their dirty needles for clean ones. The Senate and Assembly both voted to allow six cities to establish needle exchanges, a move proponents say will go a long way toward reducing the spread of blood-borne disease, particularly HIV-AIDS, through the sharing of infected needles. Officials in drug-plagued Camden and Atlantic City have already said they would apply to participate in the program, which Gov. Corzine said yesterday he would sign into law. When that happens, New Jersey will become the last state in the country to offer some form of needle access. All others have exchange programs or allow the over-the-counter sale of hypodermic needles. "This legislation not only has the ability to change lives, it has the ability to save lives," said Assemblyman Francis Blee (R., Atlantic), a prime sponsor of the bill in the Assembly. Assembly Speaker Joseph Roberts (D., Camden), another sponsor, said its enactment was long overdue. "It's embarrassing that New Jersey has been surpassed by every other state in the nation in embracing more enlightened syringe-access laws as an effective measure to preventing human deaths and illnesses," Roberts said after his chamber endorsed the measure, 49-27. The Assembly also gave its stamp to a companion bill that would allow pharmacies to sell limited numbers of hypodermic needles without a prescription. That bill has yet to be considered in the Senate, which approved the needle exchange measure by a vote of 23-16. Needle exchange proposals have been floated in New Jersey since at least 1993 but died amid opposition from those who argue that such programs effectively endorse drug use. Though the Assembly has approved exchange legislation before, the concept met with too much resistance in the Senate. In 2004, when former Gov. Jim McGreevey tried to circumvent the legislative process by creating a needle-exchange program through executive order, critics killed the effort in court. The fight continued on the floors of the Assembly and Senate yesterday. In an impassioned address, State Sen. Ronald Rice, a Newark Democrat and perhaps the Legislature's most vocal opponent of needle exchanges, called the legislation a "death penalty bill." "People aren't dying of HIV-AIDS. They're dying from overdoses and homicides and also dying from suicide," he said before voting against the bill. "A wrong decision today could mean the lives of many, many more people." Rice entreated his colleagues to embrace expanded treatment services for drug addicts instead. "It's proven that treatment and education are working," he said. "We need to give those on drugs a hand at regaining control over their addictions - not a free needle to make it easier for them to abuse drugs." Under the bill, municipalities would have to apply to the state health department to establish needle exchanges. If accepted, they would also be required to provide other support, such as mental health and substance-abuse treatment, and housing and career counseling. To appease critics, legislators added a $10 million appropriation to the legislation to help pay for treatment services. The health department, which would regulate and monitor needle exchanges statewide, would be required to report regularly to the governor and legislators on the program's status. Health officials also would be required to hire an independent contractor to evaluate the program's success. Proponents say the program will go a long way toward tackling the HIV-AIDS problem in New Jersey. Statewide, there are about 33,000 people with the disease - the fifth-largest number in the country. And minorities are affected disproportionately - more than three-quarters of those infected are black or Hispanic, and more than a third are women. More than a quarter of the total - about 9,500 people - contracted the disease by sharing infected drug needles, according to June data released by the health department. Critics question whether needle-exchange programs help, but advocates point to several studies that show the spread of HIV-AIDS dropping in places where exchanges have been established. The programs don't only reduce the transmission of disease, proponents say. They also bring addicts into contact with health-care professionals and services, raising their chances of rehabilitation. Yesterday, officials from Camden and Atlantic City, which were tapped to participate in McGreevey's failed 2004 needle-exchange program, said they were eager to finally get started. Jose Quann, program coordinator for the nonprofit Camden Area Health Education Center, said that about 80 percent of the people his organization served were intravenous drug users. The group already distributes condoms and bleach kits - to sterilize needles - from a mobile health center it operates, and hopes to add a needle exchange to its list of services. "This is a proven intervention," Quann said. "I.V. drug users don't come out for services. This is a way to get them into services and moving them into mainstream society." Anthony Lingo, Camden's needle-exchange coordinator, said the program also would ensure that used needles were safely discarded. "We'll get hundreds of thousands of dangerous needles off the streets," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake