Pubdate: Thu, 02 Sep 2004
Source: Star-Ledger (NJ)
Copyright: 2004 Newark Morning Ledger Co
Contact:  http://www.nj.com/starledger/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/424
Author: Susan K. Livio, Star-Ledger Staff
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

JUDGE THROWS OUT ATLANTIC CITY'S ANTI-AIDS NEEDLE EXCHANGE

A judge invalidated an Atlantic City ordinance yesterday that
authorized the local health department to distribute hypodermic
needles to help prevent intravenous drug users from contracting AIDS.

Superior Court Judge H. Valerie Armstrong said municipalities lack the
authority to institute such programs. Her ruling, which the city plans
to appeal, also raises doubt about a similar ordinance approved by
Camden this summer but not yet implemented.

The decision came as lawmakers were working with Gov. James E.
McGreevey on a plan to change New Jersey law to make hypodermic
needles legally available to drug users. On Tuesday, McGreevey said he
would seek to legalize needle exchange programs before he leaves
office Nov. 15.

Assembly Majority Leader Joseph Roberts (D-Camden) said yesterday that
Armstrong's ruling "is the most recent indicator that the Legislature
needs to confront the issue of syringe exchange in New Jersey. People
- -- innocent babies -- are dying."

New Jersey ranks fifth among the states in the number of AIDS cases.
State health officials say 60 percent of those cases can be attributed
to drug use -- twice the national average.

The idea of giving addicts clean syringes has been debated by state
officials for the past decade. New Jersey and Delaware are the only
states that ban all forms of needle distribution and
decriminalization.

Atlantic City officials enacted an ordinance in June allowing the
health department to distribute needles to bring under control what
they say is an HIV epidemic. One in 33 city residents is infected with
the virus; 60 percent of the city's cases are linked to drug use.

In her decision, Armstrong said she was not evaluating whether such a
program was sound public policy, only if it comported with state law.
Without a prescription, syringes are drug paraphernalia and illegal to
possess without a prescription, she said in her 29-page opinion.

"It is abundantly clear that the Ordinance permits what is expressly
forbidden by (state law) ... the distribution of hypodermic syringes
by a municipality to persons not authorized to possess them, namely
intravenous users of illegal drugs," she wrote.

Atlantic County Prosecutor Jeffrey Blitz, who sued to overturn the
ordinance, said the judge's decision was "fully anticipated. We
advised the city early on they exceeded their authority."

Atlantic City is expected to appeal, Robert Sandman, one of the city's
attorneys, said yesterday.

The city argued that syringes are not clearly identified in state law
as drug paraphernalia. It also said the city had the right to
"exercise its broad police powers" and pass the ordinance to address a
public health emergency.

Philadelphia and Pittsburgh used that rationale when those cities
created syringe exchange programs, Roseanne Scotti, director of the
Drug Policy Alliance of New Jersey, said. Scotti helped draft Atlantic
City's ordinance.

The ruling "is going to be a disappointment to everyone in Atlantic
City who worked so hard for this -- community members, the clergy,"
Scotti said. "This squarely puts the ball in the Legislature's and the
Governor's court."

In Camden, officials are awaiting the outcome of Atlantic City's
appeal before moving forward on their own program.

'We will put our heads together, and join with them in their appeal,"
Councilman Ali Sloan-El said yesterday.

Roberts said a draft bill could be ready by the end of next week. The
options include permitting over-the-counter sale of syringes; creating
a pilot program; and allowing municipalities to operate their own
distribution sites supervised by the state.

Opponents who see needle exchange as condoning drug use are mobilizing
to block the effort.

Sen. Ronald Rice (D-Essex) called on other urban lawmakers to defeat
the bill.

"In Newark, we see the effects of drug abuse everyday in our streets.
Government subsidizing of such a dangerous practice as needle use can
only spell trouble for areas already battling the war on drugs," he
said.

Another opponent, John Tomicki, executive director of League of
American Families, said needle exchanges are a "a very unhealthy and
risky government policy" and added: "I sincerely doubt there is the
support within the Legislature to pass such a controversial and
unhealthy program."

Assembly Speaker Albio Sires (D-Hudson) said he would support needle
exchange legislation and allow the proposal to be voted on by the
Assembly in the fall. Senate President Richard Codey (D-Essex), who
will take over as acting governor in November, wants to see what the
bill says before he takes a position, said his spokeswoman Kelly Heck.
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