NYers Dying While Cuomo Drags Feet On Heroin Sites, Activists Say

MIDTOWN MANHATTAN, NY — New Yorkers are still dying from drug overdoses while Gov. Andrew Cuomo leaves plans for heroin injection facilities in limbo, protesters argued Monday. About 30 activists blocked a bus lane outside Cuomo’s Third Avenue office while urging the governor to clear the way for so-called safe consumption sites, which they say have been proven to save lives.

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Nan Goldin and Drug Policy Activists Protest NY Governor Cuomo’s Inaction

The rain was not yet falling on Monday morning, November 26, when a group of about 25 activists stormed through the streets of midtown Manhattan toward Governor Andrew Cuomo’s NYC office on Third Avenue, to demand what the state leader had already promised during his gubernatorial election: overdose prevention centers. Demonstrators also carried a large white tent with them, an example of the proposed overdose prevention centers.

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What Ever Happened With Safe Injection Sites? Activists Blame Cuomo’s ‘Stalling’

On Monday, in an effort to nudge the state toward supporting the pilot, activists with VOCAL-NY erected a pop-up safe injection room in front of the governor’s midtown office—a tactic once deployed against de Blasio prior to his endorsement of the sites. This time around, the demonstrators were joined by artist and photographer Nan Goldin, who founded the group P.A.I.N Sackler to hold the Sackler family and Purdue Pharma responsible for their central role in the epidemic.

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Push to Allow Safer Consumption Spaces

VOCAL New York is on a statewide tour this week to talk about safe consumption spaces and combating drug overdoses. These spaces are also known as supervised injection facilities. They give heroin users and others a place to take drugs with medical professionals on hand in case something goes wrong. Canada already has some facilities, and Europe has had them for years. The idea has been proposed in Ithaca and New York City. But state law would need to be changed to allow them. Joining us to make the case for doing that are Terrell Jones and Robert Suarez from VOCAL NY and Cortney Lovell from WRise Consulting.

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Tenderloin health efforts break from tradition as support for supervised injection sites grows

To help more drug users and homeless people, some on the outreach frontlines are arguing for programs that are not focused on abstinence. The programs include “wet houses,” where people can drink alcohol on-site but still receive city services, and supervised injection facilities, where people are permitted to use intravenous drugs like heroin.

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Injection ‘Chill Rooms’ Proposed For Oakland Needle Exchange Program

At last weekend’s syringe and needle exchange, Courtney and other HIV Education Prevention Project of Alameda staffers unveiled what they call a “chill room.” It’s a pop-up tent designed as a safe injection site manned by a medical professional. The group said there are 90 such sites worldwide, but the only one in North America is in Vancouver.

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SAFE SHAPE Interview

The Drugreporter team filmed a piece about the Safe Shape during the Drug Policy Alliance conference in 2015. The video features an interview with Greg Scott who came up with the original idea for SAFE SHAPE.