This
is the closest a U.S. city has come to opening facilities where drug
users may bring in their substances and use in a clean space, with
medical help on hand.
By Francie Diep
Seattle’s
mayor and county executive have signed off on the opening of two
so-called “safe” drug consumption sites in the city and county, Seattle
news outlets report. The facilities allow people to bring in their own
illicit drugs and use them while under the supervision of a trained
staff who provide clean needles, reverse overdoses, and refer folks to
further medical treatment, including addiction treatment.
“My
visit to Insite, Vancouver, Canada’s safe consumption site, made clear
these sites save lives and that is our goal in Seattle/King County,”
Mayor Ed Murray said in a statement. “Keeping people alive gives them the opportunity to get treatment and begin their path to recovery.”
Murray’s office hasn’t said yet exactly where the sites will be located or how they’ll be funded, the Seattle Times reports. KOMO News reports
that Murray noted it may be especially difficult to secure financing if
President Donald Trump follows through on his threat to cut federal
funding to sanctuary cities like Seattle.
Seattle’s
sites would be the first in the country, and there could be more on the
way. Other cities such as Sacramento, California, and Ithaca, New York,
have explored opening their own such facilities.
Advocates
consider supervised consumption sites to be an important tool for
saving lives and reducing the toll of America’s opioid epidemic, but
opponents worry about enabling drug use and seeing an influx of drug
users in the neighborhoods where they’re located. When Pacific Standard visited
the neighborhoods surrounding a supervised injection site in Vancouver,
British Columbia, local shop owners refused to comment on the facility.
“Resistance can be expected for many blocks around,” says Norm Stamper, a former Seattle police chief and drug-policy reform activist.
The
science shows that supervised consumption sites reduce overdoses in
their immediate vicinity and encourage people to get medical help. The
sites may also reduce needle sharing among drug users, which would help
slow the spread of infections such as hepatitis C and HIV. No studies
have found they encourage crime or further drug use, and some research
shows drug users are reluctant to travel very far to visit a supervised
injection site, which suggests the facilities don’t “draw” users from
afar.
The
sites are not legal under United States federal law, Kelly Dineen, a
professor of health law at Saint Louis University School of Law, told the Washington Post.
Seattle’s closest model, the site in Vancouver, operates under an
exception from Canada’s Supreme Court; it’s unclear whether something
similar would work for Seattle. In addition, law enforcement could
technically arrest visitors to the site for drug possession, but in
cities where such facilities already operate, the local police
department agrees not to perform such arrests, and King County Police
Chief John Urquhart has been supportive of supervised consumption sites
for Seattle.
["Drugs","Seattle","Safe Injection","Primer","Since We Last Spoke"]

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