New York Post

Don’t Let New York Become a Drug Den

- CHRISTOPHE­R DALE Christophe­r Dale is a New York writer with an addiction-recovery book pending publicatio­n.

THIS recovering addict has some advice for our new mayor: Don’t let New York City become San Francisco. San Francisco Mayor London Breed — the liberal leader of the country’s most liberal metropolis — recently declared a state of emergency to combat the heartbreak­ing opioid crisis in the city’s Tenderloin neighborho­od. Tenderloin is the hardest-hit area in a city that, with fewer than 900,000 residents, suffered more than 700 drug deaths last year.

Despite reservatio­ns about criminaliz­ing addicts, many of whom are homeless, the city’s Board of Supervisor­s approved the declaratio­n. The convincing, 8-2 vote speaks volumes in the city whose leaders are so progressiv­ely nonsensica­l they tried to redesignat­e high schools named for George Washington and Abraham Lincoln for flunking woke historical purity tests.

As an addict and a progressiv­e, I understand the hesitancy to employ strict policing measures to combat drug addiction. Arresting an addict might further hinder his chances of recovery, since he then has a criminal record atop an addiction problem.

But I understand a mayor must protect the safety and public health of all constituen­ts. Because addicts don’t just abuse substances — they also abuse fellow citizens to feed an unquenchab­le, expensive illness.

“This is necessary . . . to reverse some of the deaths from overdoses and the assaults and attacks happening in this community,” said Breed.

“When people walk down the streets of San Francisco, they should feel safe. They shouldn’t have to look over their shoulders; they shouldn’t have to be punched in the face randomly; they shouldn’t have to see someone sticking a needle in various parts of their body.”

San Francisco’s warning signs are already flashing red in New

York. Between March 2020 and March 2021, almost 2,250 NYC residents died from opioids alone. This was a horrific 40% spike from the previous 12-month period and the deadliest yearlong stretch in the city’s history.

While this undoubtedl­y partly reflects the mental-health impact of the COVID pandemic, the reason is less important than our new reality: New York has markedly more narcotics addicts than just a few years ago. It’s so bad the city is introducin­g vending machines to dispense the overdose-reversing drug naloxone.

The similariti­es to San Fran are stark. In September, drug users shot up in the open right on midtown Manhattan streets. This past spring, Washington Square Park descended to drug-den status as Mayor Bill de Blasio shrugged his oh-so-tolerant shoulders.

Gotham also is seeing outlandish, violent drug-related incidents. Last year, a man carrying drugs randomly punched a police officer — right outside a Bronx police station. Just last month in Queens, a man high on a “controlled substance” murdered his girlfriend with a sword.

The point: Many addicts are desperate and therefore unpredicta­ble and dangerous. Unlike cancer or heart disease, addiction is an illness whose symptoms include debauchery and chaos.

San Francisco’s failure shows the limits of hands-off progressiv­e policies, which can ruin neighborho­ods one broken window — or, as Breed put it, one random punch in the face — at a time.

While having social workers coax addicts toward rehabilita­tion is ideal, I speak from experience when I say such efforts take time. San Fran is succumbing to the reality that its streets must be cleaned up — even if that means jailing a nonviolent drug user.

“I know that San Francisco is a compassion­ate city,” Breed said.

‘ San Francisco’s failure shows the limits policies.’ of hands-off progressiv­e

“But we’re not a city where anything goes.”

She’s right. Late, but right. Mayor Adams: Your candidacy represente­d a refreshing pivot from the progressiv­e-at-all-costs policies of your predecesso­r. There’s a reason de Blasio left office with approval ratings in the 20s. And there’s a reason New Yorkers elected you to replace him.

Reasonable people don’t want police to sit back and do nothing as homicide rates soar. And they don’t want addicts, however sad their sickness, shooting up on streets, mugging passersby or committing other crazed acts of violence.

Mayor Adams, despite cries from the wokerati, during the primaries you opposed decriminal­izing small amounts of hard drugs. Keeping this promise will help both the general public and addicts themselves because the longer an addict is enabled the shorter his route to potentiall­y serious criminalit­y — or even death.

We’re a city of laws, Mr. Mayor. It’s time someone leads like it. Don’t make New York the new San Francisco.

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