Pubdate: Fri, 13 Nov 2009
Source: Lancaster New Era (PA)
Copyright: 2009 Lancaster Newspapers, Inc.
Contact: http://www.lancasteronline.com/pages/paper/newera/letter.php
Website: http://lancasteronline.com/pages/paper/newera/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/230
Author: Jeff Hawkes
Cited: Common Sense for Drug Policy http://www.csdp.org/
Referenced: The Pharmacy Board action 
http://www.dos.state.pa.us/bpoa/lib/bpoa/20/phabd/Needles_and_Syringes.pdf
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

BUSINESSMAN LOOKS FOR NEEDLE-EXCHANGE PROGRAM SPONSOR

For 11 years, businessman Robert E. Field has quietly made sure 
intravenous drug users in Lancaster had free access to sterile needles.

Field in 1998 started a needle-exchange program that today is handing 
out more than 7,000 needles per month to reduce the spread of HIV and 
other blood-borne diseases.

For all these years, Field has personally bankrolled the 
$50,000-a-year operation, but now he's ending his financial support 
in hopes the wider community is ready to embrace the concept of 
needle exchange. As a result, the program finds itself at a crossroads.

In the program's early years, Field hired workers to dispense needles 
where drugs users gathered. Now people go to Bethel AME Church on 
East Strawberry Street to exchange dirty needles for clean ones.

The exchange also connects drug users with social service agencies 
and drug treatment programs. More than 100 are referred to treatment 
programs each month, Field said.

Because the state's drug paraphernalia law criminalizes the 
possession of needles for illegal drugs, Field informed then-Mayor 
Charlie Smithgall and former police Chief Michael Landis before 
starting the exchange in November 1998.

City officials told Field they'd investigate only if someone complained.

As a result, Field shunned publicity. But he's going public now 
because the state Pharmacy Board in September lifted a decades-old 
ban on over-the-counter syringe sales.

"Deregulation ... facilitates the syringe-exchange program becoming 
part of a continuum of professionally managed services for addicts," 
said Field, who insisted on answering questions by e-mail.

Field said he is ending financial support after December because the 
regulatory change should free Lancaster General Hospital or other 
organizations to fund the effort.

There are at least two precedents for out-in-the-open exchanges in 
Pennsylvania. The government has allowed an exchange to operate in 
Philadelphia since 1992 and in Pittsburgh since 2002.

"I have requested that LGH use a tiny portion of its immense profits 
for this purpose, since syringe deregulation has removed any stigma 
from the activity," Field said.

Alice Yoder, director of community health at Lancaster General 
Hospital, has met for several months with Field and others in 
harm-reduction work and is aware of the funding challenge Field has issued.

Yoder said the hospital does not have a position on the practice of 
needle exchange, but physician and board committees have been asked for input.

The Rev. Edward M. Bailey, pastor of Bethel AME Church, where needles 
are distributed Tuesday through Saturday, said the need is great and 
he wants to continue hosting an exchange even if Field stops writing checks.

"Just the number of needles tells you there's a need," Bailey said. 
"If Robert doesn't fund this, we will still do the needle-exchange 
program. It may not be at the same level right away, but we'll figure 
something out because it's something that needs to be done."

The Urban League of Lancaster County also has expressed an interest 
in being part of a multiagency collaboration.

Josh Dixon, the Urban League's chief executive officer, said a 
needle-exchange program fits with the agency's mission of building 
healthy and safe communities.

"What I can say," Dixon said, "is there is a definite need in the 
community" for a needle-exchange effort that prevents disease and 
gets people off drugs.

Field, a chief executive of Lancaster-based Manor Group, which 
operates apartment complexes and hotels in Pennsylvania, New Jersey 
and West Virginia, is a long-time advocate of drug law reform and 
harm-reduction strategies such as needle exchange. He co-chairs a 
group called Common Sense for Drug Policy.

In a September 1997 letter to the editor in the Intelligencer 
Journal, Field first made the case for a needle exchange program in Lancaster.

Citing studies that documented huge reductions in the spread of HIV 
and hepatitis in cities where needle exchanges operate, he wrote, 
"Lancaster needs to catch up with the rest of the nation."

"All we need are a few compassionate volunteers dedicated to making 
this a better and safer world," Field added.

The letter prompted Lancaster attorney Daniel H. Shertzer Sr. to 
offer Field his support in starting a needle exchange. "I certainly 
don't think clean needles are an incentive to use drugs," Shertzer 
said in a recent interview. "It just makes sense to guard (drug 
users') health and other people's health."

Field began to recruit other supporters, and by November 1997 he had 
an advisory board that included physicians, lawyers and clergy. Among 
them was psychiatrist Dr. Brian Condron, who had observed 
Philadelphia's needle-exchange program for a day and seen how it 
prevented disease and got dirty needles off the street.

Among the local officials Field contacted was then-county 
Commissioner Ron Ford. He asked Ford, who is African-American, for 
potential board members from the minority community.

Ford, in a recent interview, recalled talking to Field and in 
particular advising him to brief law enforcement officials about what 
he was trying to do. Ford said he was a supporter of a needle 
exchange because he had visited Baltimore's program and seen the need.

"It's a depressing thing to see," Ford said, "but it's necessary."

Smithgall recalled meeting with Field and attorneys over setting up a 
needle exchange. Smithgall said he decided to "let the police handle 
it. I didn't get in the middle of it."

Landis, now chief county detective, in a recent interview said he was 
informed in advance of the exchange. He said his policy was to leave 
the exchange alone unless someone complained. Then "we would 
investigate any complaint as a violation of the (paraphernalia) law," he said.

"At that time," Landis said, "nothing had changed to permit the 
distribution of what is essentially paraphernalia."

Landis, who stepped down as police chief in 2000, said no complaints were made.

Field's first employee for the needle exchange was Rochelle Baerga, 
who had been an HIV educator with the Urban League and Salvation 
Army. She she hit the street with clean needles on Nov. 5, 1998.

John Faunce, a mental health therapist in Berks County who worked 
with Condron in Lancaster in 1998, volunteered to help get the 
exchange started. He recalled driving with Baerga and looking for addicts.

"You have to understand the reluctance of an addict to come up to a 
stranger," Faunce said. One strategy Baerga used was to offer 
McDonald's coupons as a way to start a conversation with a user.

"It didn't take long for people to catch on that it was OK to come 
out," Faunce said. (Baerga died in 2008.)

After Bethel AME Church became the host of the needle-exchange 
program, Bailey was surprised both by how many people came for 
needles and by who they were.

"We thought the greatest need was going to be among the people of the 
city and people of color," Bailey said. "But we found out it's much 
more expansive than that. The majority of people who come to us are 
non-black and non-Latino. People are coming on their lunch hour. 
They're coming from work. They come in decent cars. Some are business 
owners, professionals, construction workers, not just the so-called riff-raff."

Bailey oversees the two exchange staffers: Mary Hoskins, risk 
reduction supervisor, and Charlene Crosby, outreach specialist.

He said the staff gives out needles, helps people get into treatment 
or receive social services and offers something maybe even more 
important: a listening ear.

"Sometimes it's just being there for people to talk to, to sit down 
with them," Bailey said. A simple conversation may be what starts 
someone on the road to recovery.

"What we're really trying to do is get folk to begin taking charge of 
their illness," Bailey said. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake