New York Post

Inject site near day care center

- By GEORGETT ROBERTS and NOLAN HICKS nhicks@nypost.com

The Big Apple’s new supervised injection site for drug addicts in East Harlem sits right across the street from a day care for toddlers, leaving parents with new worries about safety in the already tough neighborho­od.

The Echo Park Children and Family Center at 1841 Park Ave. sits directly across the street from the legalized shooting gallery at 104-106 East 126th St, which previously just provided needle exchange services.

As The Post reported this week, the center is one of two that also allow addicts to use whatever illicit drug they should choose on the premises — even smoking crack.

“They shouldn’t be so close to the school because kids come here. I worry about the safety of my child,” said Jorge Molina, a barber whose 4-year-old daughter goes to the day care. “They should not have it there.”

Tasha Cucuta, whose 3-yearold attends Echo Park, ripped city officials for opening the site there as she picked up her kids.

“Whatever you are going to do, you don’t put this kind of a center directly across the street from a pre-school. That makes no sense,” said the 44-year-old.

“It may be helping them not to overdose but when they come out high, we have to deal with them and it’s not something I want to subject my 3-year-old to.”

A recovered addict who lives in the neighborho­od defended the program as one way to get drug addicts off the streets when they use.

“They are helping the addicts not to use drugs around the kids and everybody,” said Luis, who declined to give his last name.

The Post revealed Thursday that City Hall did an end-run around approvals it said were required from the state Health Department just three years ago and launched supervised drug injection services this week.

Officials now claim the needle exchange licenses held by the East Harlem location and the second spot, which is in Washington Heights, provide sufficient legal cover.

New York State law applies additional penalties to the sale of drugs near schools or childcare facilities, making them a Class B felony.

Asked about having a legal shooting gallery so near a day care site, a de Blasio spokesman declined to answer and instead defended the operator.

“This organizati­on has been providing lifesaving services in this neighborho­od for decades,” said City Hall spokesman Mitch Schwartz.

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