Pubdate: Wed, 16 Dec 1998 Source: San Mateo County Times (CA) Contact: http://www.newschoice.com/newspapers/alameda/smct/ Copyright: 1998 by MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Section: Nation-World Page 2 Author: Associated Press S.F. HOMELESS SET RECORD IN HEROIN-RELATED DEATHS SAN FRANCISCO Heroin's popularity Is growing among San Francisco's homeless - - and It's killing them. Of 86.drug-related deaths among the homeless last year, 40 were connected to heroin, according to a health department study released Tuesday. "Cocaine Is a drug of celebration and heroin Is a drug of desperation," said Evelyn James, spokesman for the federal Drug Enforcement Ad-ministration in San Francisco. "When people are on the street and they want to feel out of it ... heroin will do that for them." Nearly 160 homeless people died in San Francisco between Dec. 1, 1997 and Nov. 30, 1998 -the highest number since the city started keeping track in 1987. "Low vacancy rates, exorbitant rents and loss of public housing units have exacerbated the homeless problem," the report said. "At the same time, without permanent affordable housing, It is 'exceedingly difficult for homeless people to ~ manage their health Issues, such as diabetes, mental health or addiction." Many say drug and alcohol addiction among street people has become an epidemic. "The majority of people you see on the street have a substance abuse problem. That problem Iswhat caused them to be homeless," said Earl Ry-nerson, a former member of San Francisco's Human Services Commission, which decides how to allocate public money. The health department agrees that heroin over-doses have exploded during the past two years because very pure heroin at a relatively low cost is readily available throughout the city. A single dose, about a quarter grain, costs about $20. "We're being inundated with heroin right now. It's making a big resurgence and It doesn't have the stigma It used to." said police Lt. Mike Puccl-nellI, who works in the department's narcotics unit. "You have all these young (street) kids and they're all getting hooked on heroin." And social services programs are not ade-quately addressing the problem, police and Ry-nerson said. "If we keep providing city services to people on the street, we're making It easier for them to live on the street," Rynerson said. "The less we do for them the more likely It Is that they'll go into a (treatment) program." Rynerson, who left the commission earlier this year, suggested making $287 monthly assistance payments contingent on receiving treatment. "The first and 15th are like pay days," Puccl-nelll said. "They get It and they don't use the money for living expenses.. . the money goes into narcotics and alcohol. We end up subsidizing their habit." - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski