Pubdate: Thu, 02 Sep, 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Hallye Jordan Section: page 1 Note: Hallye Jordan may be contacted at or (916) 441-4601. Related: Complete SJMN coverage at www.mercurycenter.com/local/center/needle090299.htm DAVIS PREPARED TO APPROVE SOME NEEDLE EXCHANGES SACRAMENTO -- Gov. Gray Davis and a key legislator reached a compromise Wednesday that would legalize the underground needle-exchange programs that Santa Clara and other counties have been running to stem the spread of the AIDS virus among drug addicts. Under the agreement, cities and counties that authorize needle-exchange programs using emergency public-health ordinances would be immune from prosecution. The new measure, negotiated by the governor's aides, is a slimmed-down version of a similar bill that the Legislature passed last week but that aides said Davis would veto. The governor's spokesman, however, cautioned that tinkering with this new bill could derail it. "The governor doesn't want to see this expand beyond the narrow scope that was discussed," Michael Bustamante said. Dr. Martin Fenstersheib, director of the Santa Clara County Department of Health, said the bill would encourage programs that many health officials believe save lives. "The communities that have the need and desire will be able to proceed, and those that are operating underground . . . can begin operating within the law," he said. Several communities that have flirted with creating similar programs have backed down because state law prohibits them. San Francisco, Berkeley, Santa Cruz and Los Angeles have enacted programs under emergency ordinances, which require them to be renewed every two weeks. Santa Clara County's program went underground three years ago when former state Attorney General Dan Lungren threatened county supervisors with lawsuits or jail. The current program, which officials believe reaches only about one-third of the county's estimated 15,000 drug addicts, operates with the tacit approval of county officials and San Jose police. Fenstersheib said legalizing needle-exchange programs would allow the county to expand its operation and hire a full-time staff. Currently the program is run on a shoestring budget of $40,000 a year by volunteers who distribute clean hypodermic needles at three San Jose sites. The author of the original needle-exchange bill, Assemblywoman Kerry Mazzoni, D-San Rafael, said the new version isn't as broad as she would have liked but is a good start. "This is very positive," Mazzoni said. "It is greatly needed, and it will save lives." Regina Aragn, public policy director for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, said, "It is essential that any compromise agreement send a clear message to local communities that needle-exchange programs are both legal and appropriate." The foundation, a strong supporter of Mazzoni's original bill, last week released results of a Field Research Institute poll that indicated 69 percent of Californians favor needle-exchange programs to prevent the spread of disease. Support among Bay Area residents was even higher: 83 percent. Mazzoni's original bill, which she pulled back from the governor's office to revise, cited studies that showed the programs prevent the spread of HIV and AIDS, and also required public-health and law-enforcement officials to be involved in any community-based needle-exchange program. That language was stripped from the new version. Mazzoni's new measure has to be approved by the Legislature before the session ends next week. She said she has "no reason to believe the governor will not sign the bill" because his staff approached her about writing a new version. Bustamante, Davis' press secretary, said the governor opposed Mazzoni's original bill because it amounted to a state sanction of needle-exchange programs, an issue that he said should be dealt with at the local, not state, level. Top Democratic officials have called on Davis to sign a needle-exchange bill, including San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown and 21 congressional Democrats from California. The sheriffs of two of the most populous counties in the state -- San Francisco and Los Angeles -- also have written Davis, arguing needle-exchange programs reduce HIV infections without increasing drug use. Mazzoni's first bill, however, was opposed by statewide organizations representing police chiefs and sheriffs. John Lovell, a Sacramento lobbyist for the groups, said programs that provide junkies with clean needles violate anti-drug laws. - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder