Pubdate: Mon, 13 Sep 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Sue Hutchison, Mercury News Staff Columnist NEEDLE SWAPS MAY GAIN LIFESAVING LEGITIMACY JEFF Cormier took a plastic biohazard bucket out of the trunk of his '91 Lexus last week at the usual spot, not far from San Jose Arena. He was pretty hard to miss, standing on the curb wearing an Indiana Jones-style fedora. He doesn't look like the one-man staff of an ``underground operation.'' But he is. He put a couple of boxes of clean syringes on the sidewalk and waited for the 6 p.m after-work crowd. One of the first ``regulars'' to stop by was a woman who had been coming every week for more than three years. The puffy scars on her arms were a legacy of half a lifetime of shooting drugs into her veins. She said she used to drive all the way from Modesto to dispose of her dirty needles at Cormier's outpost, the only needle exchange in Santa Clara County, run by the AIDS Resources and Information Service. Several of the regulars were wearing shirts with company logos stitched onto the pockets when they came to drop their needles into the biohazard bucket. All of them were middle-aged. The thing to keep in mind about the addicts who stop by the ARIS needle exchange is, among the estimated 13,000 to 15,000 intravenous-drug users in Santa Clara County, they represent the small fraction trying to stem the spread of disease. It's easy to write them off as hopeless junkies, but they're the only junkies who have it together enough to try to keep their habit from killing other people. SINCE the state Legislature passed a bill last week that protects needle-exchange programs from criminal prosecution, Cormier and his colleagues in other counties hope there will be more funding available to reach out to addicts who are still playing Russian roulette with dirty needles. It's about time. For years, the medical community and even some law enforcement agencies have said needle-exchange programs can halt the spread of AIDS without creating new junkies. It's the reason a lot of cops, including many in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, don't arrest people who show up at ``underground'' needle exchanges. It's the reason a recent Field Poll showed overwhelming support for needle-exchange programs, even among self-described conservatives. But politicians who insist on confusing a public health issue with a morality issue outlawed the programs several years ago. Even though the spread of AIDS through IV-drug use has leveled in Santa Clara County, the public health department reports that 70 percent of addicts who come through the system are infected with hepatitis C, a sometimes fatal disease that's far more contagious than HIV. Clearly, there's a new, urgent need for needle-exchange programs. Dr. Martin Fenstersheib, Santa Clara County's health officer, hopes the new law will shake loose private grant funding from foundations who'd been afraid to help the county sponsor illegal programs. SOME needle exchanges in other counties have gotten private donations and launched remarkable outreach programs. Joey Tranchina has been running a program in San Mateo County for more than a decade. Now it's partially funded by private grants and exchanges 329,000 syringes a year. ``We do exchanges with guys living under the freeway and with people at the end of long driveways in Los Altos,'' he said. ``This is about building a bridge of trust between health educators and drug injectors . . . and that's why the spread of AIDS among drug users here has flat-lined since needle-exchange programs started. I may not be able to prove the connection, but it's one hell of a coincidence, don't you think?'' Jeff Cormier knows it's no coincidence. He wouldn't be handing out syringes on the curb every week if he thought so. It's time for the governor to sign the needle-exchange bill so Cormier, Tranchina and others fighting on the front can finally have some fresh troops before the body count starts to climb again. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea