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To: Mr. Blond
"Research suggests safe injection sites lead to reduced numbers of fatal overdoses, decreased risky injection behaviors, decreased public drug use, and increased entry into drug treatment. In one striking example, a 2011 study of a Vancouver injection site found the rate of overdose deaths decreased by 35 percent in the surrounding area following the facility’s opening."
22 posted on 12/02/2016 2:28:54 PM PST by NobleFree ("law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual")
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To: NobleFree

There you go. Personally I like the idea of getting them out of the way in one spot, where law enforcement and social services can deal with them instead of being spread all over the city. After all, supporting a homeless shelter does not mean you support homelessness.


26 posted on 12/02/2016 2:43:06 PM PST by Mr. Blond
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To: NobleFree

Santa Cruz California started a program to provide free needles to drug users to discourage them from sharing needles. It hasn’t worked out very well.

Santa Cruz County discarded needle count pushes 12,000

SANTA CRUZ – In the nearly four years that the community group Take Back Santa Cruz formed its Needles Solutions Team, volunteers have recorded finding 11,745 used hypodermic needles that were improperly disposed throughout Santa Cruz County — averaging 261 found per month.

Between August and September this year, the group marked a significant spike in found needles, up to 423, but for the right reasons, said Take Back Santa Cruz founder Analicia Cube.

Santa Cruz city officials were involved with cleanups on the San Lorenzo River’s west levee and the Sycamore Grove area off Highway 9 and reported found needles, according to Cube.

Needle finds quick facts
• On Sept. 8: Take Back Santa Cruz self-reporting tool shows a mother reporting that child found a syringe in yard on San Lorenzo Boulevard, mistook it for a thermometer and put it in her mouth. She was not pricked by the needle.

• According to a 2008 Paediatrics and Child Health Journal article, the risk for children pricked by a needle of contracting a bloodborne virus is very low.

• On Aug. 23 on Lee Street, a resident found about 40 needles in an encampment next to her yard.

• General needle “hot spots” include the San Lorenzo River levee, Sycamore Grove, Depot Park, Cowell Beach, Neary Lagoon and Arana Gulch.

http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/09/20/web-needles-0921/


29 posted on 12/02/2016 4:47:34 PM PST by artichokegrower
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