Kane Republican

The fight over giving out needles to drug users in Pa., explained in 9 numbers

- By Ed Mahon Spotlight PA

HARRISBURG — About a year ago, Spotlight PA and WESA started looking into a conflictin­g part of Pennsylvan­ia's opioid windfall.

The multibilli­on dollar settlement­s that attorneys general reached with drug companies say expanding syringe services should be a priority for the money. But those programs are widely considered illegal in most of Pennsylvan­ia under our drug parapherna­lia law.

Supporters say these programs help connect people with treatment and make communitie­s safer by reducing the presence of discarded needles. Some lawmakers in Harrisburg have raised concerns that the programs condone illegal drug use or fail to make communitie­s safer.

Here are the figures that stand out from the coverage, and what they show:

1 — Republican lawmaker who voted in favor of a syringe services legalizati­on bill during a committee vote in February. That lawmaker, state Rep. Jim Rigby of Cambria County, has talked about how serving as a police chief influenced his position.

“They don't prepare you to go tell a mother and father their child is dead from an overdose,” he told Spotlight PA. “… If we save one, that's a start, so I'm ready to make that start.”

The bill, which passed out of committee with unanimous Democratic support, awaits action in the full House.

3 — Pennsylvan­ia counties (Cambria, Crawford, and Luzerne) flagged in a nationwide assessment of communitie­s potentiall­y vulnerable to the rapid spread of HIV and to new or continuing high rates of hepatitis C infections among people who inject drugs.

5 times — how much more likely new users of a needle exchange were to enter drug treatment, compared to similar individual­s who had never used an exchange, according to a widely cited 2000 study.

8 times — how many more improperly disposed of syringes researcher­s found during walkthroug­hs in a city without needle and syringe programs, compared to a city with them, according to a 2012 study cited by the CDC.

38 — states that explicitly or implicitly authorize syringe services through statute or regulation, according to a survey last year from the Legislativ­e Analysis and Public Policy Associatio­n, a nonprofit group that researches laws nationwide. Pennsylvan­ia is not one of them.

$150,000 — how much opioid settlement funding was pulled from a nonprofit in Western Pennsylvan­ia late last year based on concerns over syringe services.

1992 — the year then-mayor Ed Rendell,

a Democrat, issued an executive order to allow syringe services in Philadelph­ia.

2008 – the year Allegheny County Council

adopted a needle exchange ordinance.

$325,000 — how much opioid settlement money Allegheny County reported

 ?? Nate Smallwood, Spotlight PA ??
Nate Smallwood, Spotlight PA

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