Pubdate: Thu, 02 Aug 2007 Source: Record, The (Hackensack, NJ) Copyright: 2007 North Jersey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.bergen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/44 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) SOME DAMAGE UNDONE PROVIDING free, clean syringes to drug addicts is no cause for celebration. It just happens to beat letting them use dirty needles and spread a deadly disease -- which, in our deeply imperfect world, is the only real alternative. Now that New Jersey's leaders have become the last in the Union to grasp that piece of wisdom, Paterson and three other cities can begin benefiting from it. State health officials this week approved pilot programs that will give out clean needles in exchange for dirty ones in an effort to slow the spread of AIDS in Paterson, Newark, Camden and Atlantic City. The cities applied to start the service under state legislation passed in December, which made the programs legal on a limited basis. Although every other state allows a means of legal access to clean needles -- either through needle exchanges or non-prescription sales - -- New Jersey did not join them easily. Needle exchange was blocked for more than a decade in Trenton. Leading opponents included former Gov. Christie Whitman, several Republicans in the Legislature and a key Democrat, state Sen. Ronald Rice of Newark. To get it passed, Governor Corzine and other supporters had to agree to several concessions, including a three-year limit on the program and no provision of state funds. The idea also faced opposition in some of the eligible cities, including Paterson, which applied to institute the program despite balking by Mayor Jose "Joey" Torres and a few members of the City Council. We applaud Torres and the council majority for ultimately making the right call. Opponents tend to argue that distributing needles encourages drug use, as if the decision to inject heroin into one's veins was ever predicated on the availability of properly sterilized paraphernalia. On the local level, officials who object to the idea say it could make their cities drug marketplaces attracting addicts from miles around, as if the drug dealers might be stymied by a syringe shortage. These claims appeal to the understandable anger, fear and disgust of many voters. But don't bother looking for evidence to support any of them. There is ample evidence, however, that needle distribution reduces the spread of AIDS and other blood-borne diseases. The proportion of New Jersey's HIV and AIDS cases attributed to intravenous drug use is 43 percent, more than twice the average national share. With more than 66,000 cases, New Jersey ranks fifth among the states in its HIV infection rate, and first in the proportion of patients who are women. For the long delay in doing something about that, New Jerseyans can thank the state's high ranking in another area: politicians with an excessive attachment to their own prejudices and reelection prospects. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman