Pubdate: Fri, 14 May 1999 Source: Orange County Register (CA) Copyright: 1999 The Orange County Register Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Author: Noah Isackson-The Associated Press ASSEMBLY VOTES TO ALLOW NEEDLE-EXCHANGE PLANS Health: Gov.Wilson vetoed similar bills three times,but Gray Davis may sign it this time. Sacramento-Drug users could receive clean hypodermic needles from state-approved programs under a bill backed Thursday by the Assembly. The measure is intended to reduce the sharing of contaminated needles, one way that the AIDS virus, hepatitis and other infectious diseases are transmitted. Critics say such programs don't work and give the impression that the government approves of drug use. "This bill is not about promoting drug use, this bill is about public health," said Assemblywoman Kerry Mazzoni, D-San Rafael, the measure's sponsor. "Drug addiction is a disease, and the people who are addicted will do anything to get what they need and jeopardize people's health to do it." Under California law, it is illegal to distribute or have hypodermic needles or syringes without a doctor's prescription. Mazzoni's bill, approved 43-29, would allow local governments to establish programs that distribute the supplies without such permission. Despite the current ban, about 17 clean-needle programs currently flaunt the law, operating via permission of emergency measure enacted by counties, Mazzoni said. Nationally, injection-drug users are the second-largest group at risk of becoming infected with HIV and developing AIDS. Those infected commonly pass on the disease to their partners and children, Mazzoni said. In California, nearly one-third of new AIDS cases reported last year were associated with injection-drug use, according to the San Francisco AIDS Foundation. Assemblyman Tony Stricklan, R-Thousand Oaks, was joined by other Republicans who argued that the bill would do more damage than good. "It sends the wrong message to the youth of California," Strickland said. "The bill says it's OK to use drugs as long as you don't get AIDS." Bills to authorize needle-exchange programs have been proposed and defeated or vetoed repeatedly since 1992. Former Gov. Pete Wilson vetoed similar bills three times. Mazzoni told reporters that Gov. Gray Davis has given her indications that he may support her bill. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck