Pubdate: Sat, 06 Feb 2016 Source: Baltimore Sun (MD) Copyright: 2016 The Baltimore Sun Company Contact: http://www.baltimoresun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37 Author: Kevin Rector BILLS WOULD DECRIMINALIZE SMALL AMOUNTS OF DRUGS Two Baltimore-area lawmakers plan to introduce legislation in Annapolis that would decriminalize small amounts of all illicit drugs - - from cocaine to crack to heroin - and provide new options for addicts to shoot up safely and seek treatment. The legislation, sponsors said, would free up police resources and reduce incarceration rates by treating low-level drug users like patients rather than criminals. It would force hospitals to provide on-demand substance abuse treatment in emergency rooms and reduce overdoses and the spread of infectious diseases by creating facilities where addicts can consume drugs safely under medical supervision, they said. One proposed bill would establish pilot programs to test whether crime could be further reduced by providing pharmaceutical-grade heroin directly to repeat criminal offenders who have consistently failed to recover from addiction through existing treatment options. Del. Dan Morhaim, a Baltimore County Democrat and physician who is sponsoring the bills, said such progressive programs, modeled on international successes, are needed to address the rising rate of opioid and other overdose deaths across the state in recent years. "The status quo isn't working," Morhaim said, because treating addicts as criminals and drugs as an illicit commodity fuels the profitability of the drug trade and undercuts the ability of addicts to find employment when they return to their communities after incarceration or recovery. Recent studies indicate there are an estimated 19,000 heroin users in Baltimore, including roughly 9,500 chronic users, and the issue has attracted additional attention as overdoses have increased significantly in the state's suburbs. A task force established by Gov. Larry Hogan to study the issue has recommended expanded access to treatment, tighter monitoring of prescription drugs and greater focus on groups like inmates and ex-offenders. Morhaim's bills, also sponsored by Sen. Shirley Nathan-Pulliam - a Democrat and registered nurse who represents parts of Baltimore City and Baltimore County - go well beyond the recommendations of the governor's task force, and their chances of passing are uncertain. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom