The Commercial Appeal

Discarded needles plague Little League fields, grounds

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. – A Little League park is fighting a battle against discarded syringes with attached hypodermic needles amid the region’s outgoing opioid epidemic.

Atrisco Park, home of the Atrisco Valley Little League in Albuquerqu­e, is racing to clean up syringes littering fields and the grounds to protect the children who play on them, the Albuquerqu­e Journal reported.

Atrisco Valley Little League president Hector Aguilar said an 11-year-old girl who was practicing sliding into bases had her foot pierced by a hypodermic needle. She was tested at a hospital and “will have to undergo further testing in three months to see if she was infected with anything,” he said.

He and other coaches and volunteers walk the six baseball fields before practices or games and often find 20 to 30 syringes a day, Aguilar said.

“The needle problem affects all the fields. We even find them in the dugout, where kids sit, and under the bleachers, where the parents and spectators sit. There is one field at the west end, the very back of the park, that we can no longer use because it’s just saturated with needles,” Aguilar said. “It is completely out of commission for us.”

While the state has enacted measures in recent years to combat the scourge, its drug overdose rate of 24.8 per 100,000 remains above the national average.

Federal data put the state’s number of deaths at 493 in 2017. The figures show more than 70,000 drug overdose deaths occurred in the United States that year.

“It was very sad, disgusting and, above all, disappoint­ing,” said Marlena Gurule, whose two sons play on baseball teams at the park. “As a mother, safety is my biggest concern, of course. But another considerat­ion is that the Little League operates off of concession sales.

“It’s what allows us to purchase equipment. If Atrisco Valley Little League has to shut some of its fields, it financiall­y impacts the league as a whole, and that impacts the children in the league.”

Atrisco Park is owned and maintained by Bernalillo County. During an average season about 20 games are played on each field and more than 350 kids rely on those baseball diamonds, Aguilar said.

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