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Why 'safe' injection sites put NYC communities in danger

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  texan1211  •  2 years ago  •  9 comments

By:   Jason Curtis Anderson (New York Post)

Why 'safe' injection sites put NYC communities in danger
A pair of "Safe Injection Sites" have opened in New York City offering addicts a safe space to consume narcotics without fear of arrest. Unsurprisingly, overdoses and criminal activity have spilled over into nearby communities.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



By Jason Curtis Anderson 

Just over a year ago, New York City opened the nation's first "safe injection" sites (SIS) — two taxpayer-funded locations (one in Harlem, the other in Washington Heights) where people can use drugs while overseen by a medic.

Supporters claim that allowing drug addicts to shoot up with clean needles in a supervised setting is the most compassionate way to "reduce negative consequences associated with drug use" They argue these sites will address the nation's growing addiction crisis, which claimed the lives of 109,000 Americans in 2022 — a 44% increase over 2020.

To the surprise of few who understand these diseases, hardly any the SIS customers — less than 1% — request treatment once they are comfortably able to engage in continued drug use.

The New York Times, Jumaane Williams, Jessica Rojas-Gonzales, NYC Health Commissioner Ashwin Vasan and fellow harm reduction advocates praised the launch of the sites and immediately called for more such facilities in every borough. Indeed, the City Council is now requesting $8 million to fund four additional sites in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx.

Yet as has been seen in similar efforts in San Francisco and Vancouver, there is little evidence these sites reduce overall harm to the addict. What is certain, however, is the effect SISs have on the surrounding communities.

People who live near the sites have watched as their neighborhoods have become open-air drug markets where dealers openly sell drugs like ballpark vendors and children step over used syringes on the bus and in their local playground. Unsurprisingly, their complaints have received scant media coverage, nor have their calls to the city adequately addressed.

The problem in NYC, and throughout the country, is that harm reduction advocates — such asNYC Council member Diana Ayala, Gov. Hochul, President Biden and George Soros' Open Society Foundations— are the only ones allowed to sit at the "success-defining" table. We — the neighbors, the local business owners, the parents, the children, and the taxpayers — rightly deserve a seat at the success-defining table, too.

In Steeb's case, she led one of Northern California's largest organizations for homeless women and children—Saint John's Program for Real Change—for 13 years. During this time, 78% of the thousands of mothers she served struggled with addiction. They needed support in overcoming their disease—not in sustaining it—in order to achieve productivity, employment and the ability to parent.

Harm reduction advocates here in New York claim success is the reversal of 500 overdoses to date. But this sole metric ignores any and all concerns for the tens of thousands of Harlem residents who are experiencing more frequent encounters with drug addicts and dealers every time they leave their homes. Success cannot be the appropriate word to describe a parent witnessing the types of yelling, screaming, unwanted advances and overdoses by emotionally disturbed people now commonplace in Harlem.

An early September video introduces a new but hardly surprising phenomenon: cars showing up from other parts of the country to "camp" on the street near the Harlem East Block safe injection site. A nearby tent includes a young, pregnant, drug-addicted mother living with a man who appears to be her pimp.

New York State Gov. Hochul is one of many progressives who've expressed interest in exploring "safe injection sites."Dennis A. ClarkAlthough the sites were intended for indoor drug consumption, narcotics use regularly spills over onto the streets outside. J.C.Rice

Drug dealers likely agree with the harm reduction advocates that the experiment is a success — as they now have unfettered access to a highly motivated, lucrative customer base. But taxpayers are exasperated. They are footing the bill for drug use — as well as Narcan injections to revive people who have overdosed.

They will also be on the hookto fund a proposed "syringe buyback program" that allows drug users to exchange taxpayer-funded syringes for money, thereby billing taxpayers for the same needle twice. Last week, the City Council approved NYC Health Department proposal to establish a permanent needle buyback program intended to kick off in January.

Progressive billionaire George Soros is another high-profile supporter of injection sites through his Open Society Foundations. AP

This, of course, is in addition to the existing subsidies such as TANF, General Assistance and Medicaid that taxpayersalready provide to this population due to their inability to pass a drug test and work.

Meanwhile, children and adults are exposed daily to destructive behaviors and the perishing of their fellow human beings. What effects will the normalization of drugs such as fentanyl, a deadly poison, have on those who regularly see the posters advocating for intravenous drug use? We accept bans on cigarette use to protect nonsmokers from exposure to secondhand smoke. Why do we allow innocent bystanders to be exposed to the poisonous effects of deadly drugs?

The lose-lose in facilitating hard drug-use is that it results in stagnation, at best. Not only do the addicted lose years of their lives, if not life entirely, our communities also lose their sense of safety as drugs proliferate on the streets. This process is not just harmful, it's expensive. The two Harlem sites combined have received $3.4M of government funding though the non-profit- OnpointNYC, which claims to rely heavily on private donations.

Rather than investing in lose-lose scenarios, we propose a win-win: expand treatment centers—not safe injection sites; abstain from normalizing the use of poisonous, illegal drugs; and by all means, stop encouraging behavior that leads to more human suffering.

Michele Steeb is a senior fellow with the Texas Public Policy Foundation and oversees its initiative to transform homelessness policy in the US and Texas. She is the author of "Answers Behind the RED DOOR: Battling the Homelessness Epidemic." Co-author Jason Curtis Anderson is a writer and political consultant.


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Texan1211
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Texan1211    2 years ago
The New York Times, Jumaane Williams, Jessica Rojas-Gonzales, NYC Health Commissioner Ashwin Vasan and fellow harm reduction advocates praised the launch of the sites and immediately called for more such facilities in every borough. Indeed, the City Council is now requesting $8 million to fund four additional sites in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx.

Geniuses all.

/s

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
2  seeder  Texan1211    2 years ago
People who live near the sites have watched as their neighborhoods have become open-air drug markets where dealers openly sell drugs like ballpark vendors and children step over used syringes on the bus and in their local playground. Unsurprisingly, their complaints have received scant media coverage, nor have their calls to the city adequately addressed.

Gosh, who wouldn't want to live like that?

once again:

/s

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3  Sean Treacy    2 years ago

Indeed, the City Council is now requesting $8 million to fund four additional sites in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx

Imagine having that opened on your block.  

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
3.1  seeder  Texan1211  replied to  Sean Treacy @3    2 years ago
Imagine having that opened on your block.  

Man, if THAT doesn't influence some crackheads to move to NYC, what will?

 
 
 
squiggy
Junior Silent
4  squiggy    2 years ago

"Progressive billionaire George Soros is another high-profile supporter of injection sites through his Open Society Foundations."

... just not in his driveway.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
5  Greg Jones    2 years ago

Just a band-aid approach that doesn't solve the problem, and doesn't encourage the addict to get clean and sober.

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
5.1  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  Greg Jones @5    2 years ago

Perhaps SF will share the code for their SnapCrap App with NYC.

 
 
 
dennissmith
Freshman Silent
6  dennissmith    2 years ago

New York City at its finest. 

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
7  Jeremy Retired in NC    2 years ago
People who live near the sites have watched as their neighborhoods have become open-air drug markets where dealers openly sell drugs like ballpark vendors and children step over used syringes on the bus and in their local playground.

That's what happens when the city sets up a "safe place" to do illegal activity.

 
 

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