New York Daily News

Safe space for shooting up

In push to curb ODs, city sites opening for drug users

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

Hard-drug users will now be able to inject heroin and other drugs at two socalled safe injection sites in upper Manhattan, making New York City the first in the nation to officially sanction such services.

Mayor de Blasio and top city health officials announced the creation of the injection sites Tuesday as the city struggles to deal with a growing crisis of overdose deaths.

In the first three months of 2021 alone, 596 people died of overdoses in the city — the highest rate of such drug-related deaths in a three-month span since the city began keeping such data in 2000. In 2020, more than 2,000 people died from overdoses throughout the five boroughs — another all-time high, according to city records.

“After exhaustive study, we know the right path forward to protect the most vulnerable people in our city. And we will not hesitate to take it,” de Blasio said in a written statement. “Overdose prevention centers are a safe and effective way to address the opioid crisis. I’m proud to show cities in this country that after decades of failure, a smarter approach is possible.”

The mayor’s controvers­ial announceme­nt was made through a press release — not at one of his morning news briefings, which would have allowed reporters to pose questions directly to him.

The city-sanctioned shooting galleries will be located in East Harlem and Washington Heights.

The sites will be run by two nonprofits — New York Harm Reduction Educators in East Harlem and the Washington Heights Corner Project — a Health Department spokesman said. Both of the nonprofits are funded by the city, but the city will not staff or operate the facilities, the spokesman said.

The aim is to prevent drug users from overdosing by providing them with a safe place to get their fix. The operators of the facilities will offer clean needles and addiction treatment options, as well as naloxone, which is used to reverse overdoses. The facilities already provide tests to detect fentanyl, a powerful narcotic often used to cut other drugs like heroin and OxyContin.

Overdoses have become prevalent nationwide in recent years due to the presence of fentanyl. Intravenou­s drug use also appears to be on the rise.

In recent months in Washington Heights, it has become common to see addicts shooting up on the street and in subway stairwells. And for years, East Harlem has served as a gathering place for addicts, owing in part to the concentrat­ion of methadone clinics in the neighborho­od.

The news of the new injection sites, which was first reported in The New York Times, prompted an almost immediate backlash from the conservati­ve side of the political spectrum.

Rep. Nicole Malliotaki­s (R-S.I., Brooklyn) pointed to already existing law as her central argument against the new city policy.

A federal law, known broadly as the “crackhouse statute,” prohibits using or opening “any place, whether permanentl­y or temporaril­y, for the purpose of manufactur­ing, distributi­ng or using any controlled substance.”

Running afoul of the prohibitio­n can carry with it a penalty of up to 20 years in prison and fines up to $2 million.

In a letter to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, Malliotaki­s called the new policy “unlawful” and urged him to “close these sites and prevent this dangerous plan from expanding.”

“Experiment­s with ‘safe’ injection sites have resulted in a concentrat­ion of addicts in neighborho­ods where these sites are establishe­d, deteriorat­ing quality of life and leading to increases in homelessne­ss, theft and violence,” she wrote, referring to similar policies enacted in foreign countries. “Subjecting Americans to such an experiment here in the United States is not only illegal, but cruel.”

City Health Commission­er Dave Chokshi maintained that the opposite is true and that offering the sites represents an act of compassion.

“We have over 30 years of research,” he said. “We have a solid base of science that tells us that overdose prevention centers work. They save lives. They prevent HIV and hepatitis. They decrease public drug use and reduce syringe litter, especially over time. And they have neutral-to-improved effects on crime.”

On the legal front, though, Malliotaki­s cited a January 2021 federal court decision effectivel­y blocking an injection site in Philadelph­ia.

“As the highest-ranking law enforcemen­t official in the country,” she wrote to Garland, “it is imperative that you enforce this legal precedent.”

 ?? ?? Mayor de Blasio (inset) said Tuesday the city will oversee “overdose prevention centers” (like this one in Vancouver, British Columbia) that allow hard-drug users to inject themselves safely.
Mayor de Blasio (inset) said Tuesday the city will oversee “overdose prevention centers” (like this one in Vancouver, British Columbia) that allow hard-drug users to inject themselves safely.

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