Pubdate: Thu, 13 May 1999 Source: United Press International Copyright: 1999 United Press International ASSEMBLY PASSES NEEDLE EXCHANGE BILL SACRAMENTO, May 13 (UPI) - Previously vetoed legislation that would authorize needle exchange programs to slow the spread of AIDS and other infectious diseases has advanced to the California Senate. The Assembly passed the bill by Assemblywoman Kerry Mazzoni, D-San Rafael, today with two votes to spare over objections that it would condone illegal drug use. Mazzoni and Assemblywoman Sheila Kuehl, D-Los Angeles, insisted the key issue isn't drugs but safeguarding public health. The bill would authorize local governments to voluntarily implement clean needle and syringe exchange programs in their jurisdictions, mainly to fight the spread of HIV and hepatitis. Mazzoni says injection drug users are most at risk of contracting those diseases because they can't find sterile needles and share contaminated ones. The bill requires programs in which users exchange old needles for clean ones to develop operating procedures, a data base and data collection system to keep track of hypodermic needles and syringes that are furnished and replaced, and protect providers and users from criminal penalties. Proponents say California already has more than a dozen local needle exchange programs that which were authorized as emergency health measures. But they say cities and counties want a state law to give them legal protection. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck