Pubdate: Wed, 24 Feb 2010 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Mike Howell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) U.S. ADVOCATE LAUDS SUPERVISED INJECTION SITE Critic Says Harper Government Waging Failed American Drug War The leading crusader in the U.S. for drug policy reform got his first look at the city's supervised drug injection site last week. Dr. Ethan Nadelmann, the founder and executive director of the New York-based Drug Policy Alliance, came away impressed after his visit Friday to Insite on East Hastings. "I thought it was fantastic," Nadelmann told the Courier on the sidewalk outside the injection site. He is a frequent visitor to Vancouver but had never seen Insite in operation until his tour Friday. "You've got a well-run facility where people are using drugs inside and have nurses on hand if something goes wrong," said Nadelmann, who was in town over the weekend to deliver the keynote address at a drug policy forum at the Japanese Language Hall. Insite, which opened in September 2003, is the only legal injection site in North America and records an average of 600 injections per day. Nadelmann, who has a PhD from Harvard and taught politics at Princeton University, believes Insite is one of Canada's most important public health initiatives. He is disappointed the federal government is spending more of taxpayers' money to appeal a recent higher court ruling that has allowed Insite to operate indefinitely. "What an idiotic thing to do," he said. "The Harper government on drug policy is like a mindless dog wagging the tail of a failed American drug war, which we in America are already beginning to leave behind." He pointed to San Francisco as a city where various groups are pushing for an injection site. But he said the political will is absent. San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom is sympathetic to drug policy reform but his political aspirations for higher office have kept him from lobbying for an injection site, Nadelmann said. "He's not wanted to step out in the way that you saw Philip Owen or Larry Campbell or Sam Sullivan," he said, referring to Vancouver's three previous mayors who supported the injection site. U.S. president Barack Obama has not made any public comments regarding injection sites. But his administration has made significant changes related to drug laws and funding, Nadelmann said. Obama agreed to provide federal funding for needle exchanges and scrap a cocaine law that was viewed as racist. The law in question saw the same penalties meted out for possession of five grams of crack cocaine applied to possession of 500 grams of powder cocaine. Nadelmann noted a disproportionate amount of people arrested for crack were black while white people were caught with larger amounts of powder cocaine. "It hasn't happened yet but the justice department has been negotiating in very good faith [to change the law]." In another move, Nadelmann said, the federal justice department announced it would no longer go after medical marijuana in the 14 states where its use was approved by state governments. "It basically said to state legislators that if you want to make medical marijuana legal in your own state, the feds are not going to stand in the way," he said, noting however that police raids continue in some of the 14 states, including Colorado last week. The Drug Policy Alliance has a $9 million annual budget with a staff of 45 people. One-third of its funding comes from businessman George Soros, who donated millions of dollars to various groups that support the U.S. Democratic Party. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D