Pubdate: Sun, 24 Dec 2006
Source: Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ)
http://www.nj.com/news/ledger/jersey/index.ssf?/base/news-5/1166939198309770.xml&coll=1
Copyright: 2006 Newark Morning Ledger Co
Contact:  http://www.nj.com/starledger/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/424
Author: Susan K. Liviostar
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

LONG BEFORE LAW, SHE WAS FACE OF NEEDLE EXCHANGE

As AIDS activists and lawmakers proudly declared  Tuesday's enactment 
of a needle exchange law a  "historic day for public health," one 
woman who worked  on the front lines of AIDS prevention in New Jersey 
a  dozen years ago couldn't help feeling heartsick.

Though Diana McCague now lives 2,000 miles away in New  Mexico, she's 
often reminded of the people she met in  New Brunswick, where she ran 
an illegal underground  needle exchange program. The Chai Project 
distributed  hundreds of thousands of needles from 1994 until 1998, 
when multiple arrests forced the group to abandon its  mission.

"Word filters back to me still about individual people  I met and 
where they are now," McCague said. "They're  dead."

While she's relieved by the new law -- which allows six  communities 
to host pilot syringe-exchange programs  overseen by the state -- 
McCague can't muster much joy.  New Jersey was the last state in the 
country to make  clean syringes accessible to drug addicts.

"There are some people who would say 'better late than  never.' But 
it makes me feel sad," she said. "It makes  me think of the 
incredible number of people who were  sick and all the grief and 
sadness felt by their  families."

It doesn't take long for her sadness to give way to anger.

"We as a society in New Jersey didn't care," McCague  said. "We 
didn't care because the people who held the  power weren't getting 
HIV. The people who had the power  to prevent those infections failed 
their constituents."

In the eight years since the Chai Project stopped  distributing 
needles, 15,000 more people in New Jersey  have been diagnosed with 
AIDS or the human  immunodeficiency virus that causes it, according 
to data from the state health department.

The mode of transmission has remained consistent: Then  and now, 
nearly half of all residents diagnosed with  HIV and AIDS -- a total 
of 67,000 people since 1981 --  got it by sharing needles tainted 
with the virus, or  had sex with intravenous drug users who used dirty needles.

Few of the people involved in the battle to get the law  passed this 
year witnessed the Chai Project's role in  the 13-year-old 
legislative fight, but two longtime  proponents say they firmly 
believe the underground  network left a lasting imprint.

"Their pioneering activities were important and did help shape the 
debate in Trenton," said the Rev. Lisanne Finston, executive director 
of Elijah's Promise soup kitchen and social service agency. The Chai 
Project van rolled through the streets of downtown New Brunswick, and 
as long as they were discreet, local police left them alone.

Ultimately, the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office, on orders from 
then-Attorney General Deborah Poritz, brought an end to the Chai 
Project by arresting members for distributing drug paraphernalia. 
Poritz was appointed by Gov. Christie Whitman, who took a hard line 
against the needle exchange concept because she said it sent a mixed 
message to kids that using illegal drugs was okay.

"My opinion is they made an example of (the Chai Project) because of 
political pressure," Finston said. "Sometimes I think the public is 
out in front and it takes a lot longer for the political process to catch up."

Sen. Joseph Vitale (D-Middlesex) said he jumped on the issue as soon 
as he won election in 1998. The night after the election, he and an 
aide went to observe the Chai Project in action.

"They were involved in counseling and handing out literature and 
taught the participants how to remain safe, and told them when you 
are ready, we can help you get help," Vitale said. "It was very 
well-organized. Diana, and those with whom she worked, were as poor 
as church mice and were doing this literally to save lives."

After that, Vitale, a rookie lawmaker, asked veteran Sen. Wynona 
Lipman (D-Essex) if he could sign on as a sponsor of a bill she had 
proposed legalizing needle exchange. When Lipman died in 1999, he 
became the lead sponsor until two years ago, when Sen. Nia Gill 
(D-Essex) took over.

The Chai Project's work "drove me, and others eventually, to confront 
the issue publicly as a policy initiative," he said.

Now that needle exchange is about to move from concept to practice, 
McCague has some ideas on how New Jersey can make it work.

The new law includes $10 million to expand drug-treatment options for 
needle exchange participants. Working as a private contractor for New 
Mexico's health department training nonprofit and public health 
workers who operate syringe exchange programs, McCague stressed the 
importance of seeing addicts on their own terms, in their neighborhoods.

"You need to get out to drug users and have a conversation: What are 
the obstacles?" McCague said. She said addicts seeking help may fear 
losing their home or their families if they agree to go in for treatment.

Even without the benefit of a state-sanctioned program, McCague, said 
the Chai Project gained the trust of the people, despite racial and 
economic differences. Nearly all of the syringe exchange participants 
were black; the Chai Project members were white.

"Really poor black people let us into their homes," McCague said. "It 
took a while for people to understand that we were doing this because 
we cared about them."