Pssst!
Hey Buddy, Can You Spare a 29 Gauge with Water?
by Harold Dopman
It’s nine
o’clock in the morning. We’re
on the corner of East 105 and Morrison. Chris, a 38-year-old recovering heroin addict and recently
homeless white man asks passing neighborhood people if they need free condoms.
Most answer yes and pocket a few. Some ask for “water” and receive a ziplock
baggie containing small bottles of bleach, pure water and instructions for
cleaning syringes; along with condoms, information about AIDS, TB, and
hepatitis; and an Xchange Point business card promising emergency food and
shelter, one-on-one AIDS education, literature, referrals, support and advocacy.
A few wanted to know if they could exchange needles.
“When a
Heroin addict needs dope and doesn’t have a clean needle he’ll use a dirty
one. Whether or not he can catch AIDS is not really an issue.
It’s as simple as that;” said Chris, a recovering addict who’s been
clean now for 94 days.
“I started
using drugs when I was a teenager, and after a personal crisis four years ago I
started shooting Heroin. I wanted to die and thought this was a good way to
commit suicide. All Heroin addicts are suicidal.
The problem was that I didn’t die—I lived and my habit quickly grew
from 1 bag a day to 10 bags a day at a cost of $150 to $200 a day.”
Even though
it’s not illegal for a drug store to sell syringes without a prescription (the
law is vague) he found it nearly impossible to buy them.
“Revco
insisted on seeing an insulin prescription and Medic wanted to see my Drivers
License, a scary thing for an addict,” he added.
Cleveland
issued an emergency order over two years ago to allow a needle exchange program
run by the Free Clinic to operate in the city. They opted for a Stationary
program, where users travel to a specific site to exchange dirty needles for
clean ones.
Kenneth Vail,
who holds a Master degree in public health plus a degree in Anthropology was the
director of the program and wanted to expand it to include a “roving
program,” which would travel to various locations in the neighborhoods; but
ran into conflict with the Free Clinic, and was asked to resign. He refused and
was fired.
“One
program isn’t enough” explained Vail in his melodious Arkansas accent.
“Not every one has the same
schedule or lifestyle. Some cities have as many as ten different programs.”
A recovering
addict himself. and clean for over ten years Kenneth Vail and his Xchange Point
“Harm Reduction” Program to reduce the incidence of HIV among intervenes
drug users has battled City
Hall and Mayor Whites Law and Health Departments for months.
Every thing possible was done to undermine Xchange Points program to
distribute clean needles, condoms, health and drug abuse information to
Cleveland’s street people. When Xchange Point complied with the current
rules-the City revised the rules. Police surveillance and threats of prosecution
followed. He was forced to stop exchanging needles.
Vail found
funds, formed a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and started his own program.
Even the
morning of this interview, Vail was stopped by Cleveland police who asked if he
is distributing needles.
“No,” he
replies politely.
“Then what
are doing walking up and down the street,” they asked.
“Handing
out condoms” he answers and they move on.
An elderly
black man turns and offers, “We put up with that kind of shit all the time.”
“Practicing
Harm Reduction is more than just needle exchange,” said Dr. Joy Marshall,
medical director of the program and former director of The Free Clinic.
“We talk to
the people and say ‘ Lets work together to make this a better world.’
Let’s talk
about safe sex! Let’s talk about other health problems!”
“Anyone who
says needle exchange programs are inappropriate should go to Rainbow Babies and
Children Hospital and look at children and little babies suffering with HIV
through no fault of their own,” added Marshall with a missionary fervor.
Following a
barrage of media exposure and threats of a Federal lawsuit (which might bring a
barrage of national media attention) the City of Cleveland seems ready to
UN-revise their revisions of the statute which has prevented Xchange
Point from fulfilling their mission.
Chris, the
formally homeless, recovering addict with the college degree from CSU sums up
the situation this way:
“From a purely economic perspective would you rather spend fifteen cents for a clean needle now, or a hundred thousand dollars to take care of an AIDS patient while he dies, later?