Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jun 2002
Source: Daily Camera (CO)
Copyright: 2002 The Daily Camera.
Contact:  http://www.thedailycamera.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103
Author: Chris Barge
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

NEEDLE PROGRAM MAY KEEP FUNDS

Opposition To Cuts Appears To Persuade Health Board

Halona Donaghy is the kind of woman a heroin user can relate to.

"I have used drugs in every major city in the United States and Canada," 
she told the Boulder County Board of Health at a study session Monday. "I 
never found a place that made me feel important until I moved here."

For six years, Donaghy has volunteered for the Boulder County needle 
exchange program, getting drug users clean needles and telling them how to 
get tested for disease.

She and almost 20 other volunteers, disease prevention workers and 
concerned residents gathered at the health department to protest a proposal 
to cut all three of the program's outreach workers.

It worked.

"Find another way," board member Bill Marine told county Health Department 
Director Chuck Stout.

Stout had proposed laying off all three needle exchange outreach workers as 
part of an effort to cut $437,000 from the department's budget.

The health board has until its July 8 meeting to decide how to respond to 
Gov. Bill Owens' line-item veto of $46 million from next year's $13.8 
billion state budget. In all, Stout's proposal would have met the new 
budget by cutting 14 positions, resulting in as many as six layoffs.

Stout proposed retaining only the needle exchange program's manager and 
leaving it with a $50,000 operating budget.

The $100,000 annual cost-saving measure, according to Marine, would have 
put the program "on life support."

The board directed Stout to return on July 8 with a proposal that perhaps 
uses department reserves to keep the program running with at least one 
outreach worker until a better long-term solution can be found. The board 
gave its support for the other layoffs and staff shuffling that Stout 
proposed for the department.

Since 1989, many say, "the Works" needle exchange program has become a 
poster child for effective AIDS and Hepatitis C prevention and education 
for the country. It has done that by forging a relationship with Boulder 
County's 1,000 injection drug users - a population constantly on the move.

"Do not lose contact with this population, period, because you will lose 
them and will not find them," said Paul Simons, former director of a Denver 
outreach program for injection drug users.

News of the proposed layoffs spread from coast to coast over the weekend, 
and experts in the field responded.

Marine received e-mails bemoaning the proposal from the Institute for AIDS 
Research in New York, the director of Urban Health Studies at the 
University of California at San Francisco, a Boulder behavioral scientist 
working in Denver for the Center for Disease Control and the director of 
the Harm Reduction Coalition in New York City.

The Board of Health generally approved of the other proposed layoffs and 
staff re-assignments. The other recommendations were the following:

Lay off one half-time behavioral health administrative coordinator, a 
3/4-time immunization clerk, a half-time tuberculosis outreach worker, and 
a half-time early periodic screening diagnosis and treatment outreach worker.

Eliminate the position of health planning and epidemiology coordinator, 
vacated last week by Dennis Lenaway. Also eliminate the environmental 
health specialist position, which was vacated earlier this year.

Reduce the on-call immunization nursing staff.

Redirect some portion of work to bioterrorism preparedness from positions 
of health planning and epidemiology program support, communicable disease 
control/occupational health nurse, on-call immunization nursing staff, and 
communicable disease control specialist.

The Board of Health will take a final vote on the budget cuts July 8. After 
that, the Board of County Commissioners will consider every department's 
cuts in the county for approval.