Pubdate: Thursday, 21 January 1999 Source: Calgary Sun (Canada) Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/CalgarySun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/home.html Copyright: 1999, Canoe Limited Partnership. Author: Michael Platt JUNKIES NOT GETTING POINT Responsible city junkies are rounding up more than their share of used needles, but it's not enough to stem the tide of old syringes flooding Calgary. That's the problem faced by a city task force formed yesterday to tackle the trash left behind by an estimated 6,000 heroin and crack-cocaine addicts now shooting up here. "The city's bought into the fact it's a city-wide problem, and that's an important first step," said Virginia Wheeler, co-ordinator of the Safeworks needle-exchange program. City needle-exchanges brought in 40,000 more used syringes than the 415,000 handed out last year, but less than half of junkies use the program -- the rest just leave their "works" lying around. "I think people are more responsible for their friends here because we don't have a skid row," said Wheeler. "They've got people using in their home and they're collecting everybody's needles and bringing them in." But dealing with the needles left behind by the 4,000 junkies not using Safeworks will be the job of the city task force being led by Calgary's Fire Department. "People are asking how to clean this up themselves, so the fire department wants to educate and organize -- we'll show people how to pick the needles up properly and dispose of them," said department spokesman Lieut. John Conley. Health officials estimate 3% of city IV drug users are HIV positive, with 75% carrying the hepatitis C virus. About half of Calgary junkies prefer crack cocaine, the rest heroin, and most use both. Last year, hundreds of needles were found in parks and playgrounds throughout Calgary, with caretakers at Almadina Charter School in Victoria Park finding at least one syringe a day. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady