Pubdate: Tues, 02 Feb 1999 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI NEW JERSEY'S HARD LINE ON NEEDLE EXCHANGES NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. -- Heroin addicts are, by definition, creatures of habit, so it seemed odd that the bedraggled young man who ambled up to the needle exchange in New Brunswick was uncertain about what kind of syringe he would prefer. He closely examined several different types of needles. Finally, he selected one, abruptly announced that he was an undercover agent from the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office and arrested an AIDS activist named Diana McCague for violating New Jersey's ban on possessing or distributing syringes. "I should have known right away he was a cop," said Ms. McCague, who had been distributing clean needles to drug addicts since 1994 and has been arrested twice. "Users are very particular about the kind of works they use -- they don't need to compare them. He seemed a little too clean to be real, too." Ms. McCague's arrest, in the fall of 1998, forced her organization, the Chai Project (chai is Hebrew for life), the last of New Jersey's organized needle exchange programs, to stop distributing syringes. Volunteers now set up their van twice each week outside a soup kitchen in New Brunswick, distributing condoms, H.I.V.-prevention pamphlets and bleach kits to sterilize needles, but no syringes. The needle-less campaign, and the unusually aggressive tactic of using sting operations to snare advocates for AIDS victims, has made New Jersey the most active front in the nation's fierce political battle about the merit of needle exchanges. The state's unrelenting opposition to the programs also places Gov. Christine Todd Whitman in the uncharacteristic role of hard-liner. With her centrist views on social issues like abortion, gay rights and gun control, the Governor has cultivated a national reputation as a leader of the Republican Party's moderate wing. But mention needle exchanges, and the fact that New Jersey has the nation's third-highest rate of intravenous H.I.V. infection, and Governor Whitman can grow heated. Republican governors in New York, Connecticut and Pennsylvania use state money to pay for the programs, arguing that they save lives and spare taxpayers the high cost of treating AIDS victims, which can top $20,000 per patient per year. Mrs. Whitman lauds the county prosecutor who arrested Ms. McCague for "enforcing the law." The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health and the Surgeon General have all released studies concluding that needle exchanges significantly decrease the spread of H.I.V. without increasing drug use. Mrs. Whitman dismisses their research as "dubious, at best." Her appointed Attorney General, Peter G. Verniero, released a study in 1998 that was critical of needle exchanges. The study cited as one of its sources an article by the right-wing Heritage Foundation, which also advocated conversion to Christianity as a cure for drug addiction. And when Governor Whitman was asked recently to explain the factual basis for her unflinching belief that needle exchanges send the wrong message to children, she grew frustrated, as if the hypocrisy of the programs were so obvious it needed no explanation. "As a mother, I know that it sets a bad example," she said during an interview last month. " 'Do as I say, not as I do' is a lousy way to lead, whether you're running a family or running a state." With a few notable exceptions, medical experts from the American Medical Association to the National Academy of Sciences to the United States Department of Health and Human Services view needle exchanges as a matter of public health and say that the goal of decreasing H.I.V. infection rates far outweighs the drawbacks of providing syringes to drug addicts. But some law enforcement officials, led by Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, the White House director of drug policy, oppose the programs as a matter of principle: drugs are illegal, they maintain, and government sends the wrong message to children by providing addicts with the means to break the law. President Clinton acknowledges that needle exchanges reduce H.I.V. infection without fostering drug use. But last year he gave in to pressure from Republicans in Congress and prohibited the use of Federal money to pay for them. In fighting the needle exchanges, Governor Whitman has encountered an unlikely adversary, David W. Troast, whom she chose in 1996 to head the state's Advisory Commission on AIDS. As a wealthy businessman and an acquaintance in Mrs. Whitman's social circle, Troast was hardly someone who would be expected to side with drug users and radicals. After taking the job, however, Troast interviewed dozens of experts in public health, epidemiology and AIDS prevention, and was stunned by the magnitude and severity of New Jersey's AIDS problem. New Jersey has 26,000 people with AIDS, and the nation's highest rate of H.I.V. infection among women and children. The state also has 9,100 orphans whose mothers have died of AIDS. Troast said he was also struck by the overwhelming consensus among health experts that any serious attempt to slow the spread of H.I.V., which now infects 2,100 additional New Jersey residents each year, must include a needle exchange program. Mrs. Whitman rejected the Commission's proposal, and when Troast pushed the idea again several months later, she rejected it again. As their wrangling became highly publicized, Troast began to notice a pattern. "Whenever my council's actions got the attention of the media, the authorities cracked down on Project Chai, and Diana McCague got locked up," Troast said. "I feel personally responsible for her plight." By in the fall of 1998, Mrs. Whitman wrote a letter telling the Commission that she would never change her opposition to needle exchanges, and urging them to move on to more productive matters, like developing strategies to cut the infection rates among pregnant women and adolescents. Troast said the Commission did focus on those problems, but arrived at the same conclusion: that a small needle exchange program could cut the state's number of new H.I.V. infections by as much as 50 percent. Mrs. Whitman insists that her position is a deeply held conviction, based on common sense and firsthand experience with some of the seriously impaired children born to drug-addicted mothers. Before her first run for governor in 1993, Mrs. Whitman visited a Newark hospital that treated children born addicted to cocaine, and held some of the children who had been born with profound developmental disabilities because of their mothers' drug use. The experience convinced her that it would be better for society to discourage drug use. Convinced that Mrs. Whitman will not reverse her position, Ms. McCague and other advocates are now concentrating on protests calling for changes in the state's law after the Governor's term expires in 2001. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck