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Wash. county considers safe injection sites to fight opioid epidemic

The sites allow people suffering from heroin and opioid addiction to inject drugs under the supervision of medical professionals

By Vianna Davila
Seattle Times

KING COUNTY, Wash. — The Metropolitan King County Council is considering whether to add a measure on the February ballot that would create two safe drug-injection sites—the first locally and in the U.S.—in response to a competing proposal that would ban such locations countywide.

The measure being considered by the council on Monday essentially gives voters a choice to reject Initiative 27, a countywide ban already on the Feb. 13 ballot, and agree to the creation of two safe drug-injection sites for a three-year pilot program.

Initiative 27 landed on the ballot after organizers of the Safe King County campaign secured more than 47,000 signatures from registered voters.

Several King County cities—including Bellevue, Kent, Renton, Auburn and Federal Way—already have banned safe injection sites.

The sites allow people suffering from heroin and opioid addiction to inject drugs under the supervision of medical professionals. The sites were recommended by the Heroin Prescription and Opiate Addiction Task Force, convened in 2016 by the county, Seattle and area suburban cities. The task force recommended one site in Seattle and an undetermined King County site.

New York, San Francisco, Philadelphia and other U.S. cities are also considering opening safe injection sites in response to the national heroin and opioid overdose crisis.

“There’s evidence, with support from science, that these supervised drug-consumption sites work,” said Councilmember Jeanne Kohl-Welles, one of five County Council members who have endorsed the proposed counter-initiative.

“We have a public-health crisis,” said County Council Chair Joe McDermott, who co-sponsored the proposal along with council members Rod Dembowski, Larry Gossett and Claudia Balducci. “People are dying throughout our community because of their addiction to opiates.”

There were 219 opioid-involved deaths in the county last year—an overdose deaths almost every 36 hours, according to the proposed county ordinance.

A simple majority of the nine-member council is needed to approve the measure and put it on the February ballot.

Copyright 2017 Seattle Times