Pubdate: Thu, 18 Mar 1999 Source: York Daily Record (PA) Copyright: 1999 The York Daily Record Contact: http://www.ydr.com/ HOUSE VOTES TO RESTRICT DRUG CLINICS Two Pieces Of Legislation Would Ban Methadone Clinics From Certain Areas. HARRISBURG - Plans for a methadone clinic on South Queen Street in Spring Garden Township took a hit this week when the state House approved two pieces of legislation that would regulate where such facilities are located. Critics claim that methadone clinics, which treat heroin addicts, pose a public safety risk because they attract drug dealers. Separate bills that sailed through the state House would ban the clinics from areas where children learn and play and where families live and pray. Rep. Todd Platts, R-Springettsbury Township, whose district includes the South Queen Street location, successfully argued on Wednesday that methadone clinics should not be allowed within 1,000 feet of a residential neighborhood, school, park, playground or place of worship in a first-class township such as Spring Garden. A day earlier, Rep. James Casorio Jr., a Westmoreland County Democrat, had convinced his colleagues to support similar legislation. His version would prevent the treatment centers from opening within 2,500 feet of a church, school, playground or charitable institution in any municipality. Public outcry over methadone clinics inspired both pro posals, but Platts' proved more popular, garnering 167 yes votes to Casorio's 126. Some House members shied away from Casorio's version because it was unclear if it would apply retroactively to the state's existing methadone clinics, which number close to 30. Platts' legislation would apply only to facilities that begin operating after April 1. His measure now heads to the Senate Local Government Committee, whose vice chairman, Shrewsbury Republican Mike Waugh, has worked closely with Platts. Waugh said he ex pects the committee to take up the matter in mid-April. "I feel very positive about it," Waugh said. "I just don't see that we'll have any problem at all getting it out of the Senate committee rather quickly. What the full Senate might do, I don't know." A separate Senate committee will weigh Casorio's measure. The pair of proposals inspired mild debate in the House. Some lawmakers claimed they tied the hands of local government officials, who deserve to have say over where such facilities locate. "The Pennsylvania House of Representatives is the wrong place to be telling local municipalities how they should be dealing with these issues," Rep. Curtis Thomas, a Philadelphia Democrat, told the Daily Record. "We should not be preempting people at the local level from making decisions on where these or any other facilities should be located." Moreover, he said, a problem in one part of the state should not prompt such broad-brush policy. "I'm sure that Rep. Platts was doing what he thought was in the interest of the people who live in the township that he represents," Thomas said. "But what about all other first-class townships? Do they want that same thing?" Despite his reservations, Thomas voted for Platts' proposal, largely because it deals only with first-class townships. He rejected Casorio's because it would affect every municipality, including Philadelphia. But Platts doesn't plan to stop at first-class townships. He simply tackled them first. In time, he will introduce legislation that would extend methadone clinic restrictions to all municipalities. This would not be the first time the state steps in to regulate local land use, Platts argues. For example, Pennsylvania's liquor code dictates how far bars must be from schools, playgrounds and other community facilities. State law also limits where mining may take place. He also points out that many people who frequent schools, playgrounds, parks and places of worship in one community live in another. They cannot participate in picking the municipal officials who oversee these facilities, but they can help select state legislators. "This is a public safety issue that merits public policy from a statewide perspective," he said. Platts and local community members will meet tonight with representatives of Advanced Treatment Systems, the Chester County-based company that intends to open a methadone clinic in York. The meeting at the Spring Garden Township Building on Tri Hill Road is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Also this evening, Casorio will host a town meeting in his district, where outraged residents have banded together to hold off a methadone clinic for three years. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake