Instead of putting opioid users in jail, a proposal moving through the California Legislature would give them a place to inject drugs while trained staff watch them to make sure they don’t die from accidental overdoses.
The state Senate passed a bill on Thursday by just one vote that would allow the programs in Oakland, San Francisco and Los Angeles County. But the bill must still pass the state Assembly before it can go to Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, who would decide whether to sign it into law.
Supervised injection sites have emerged around the world in recent years, part of a movement to rethink treatment for people addicted to powerful opioids including heroin, fentanyl and some prescription pain killers.
The goal of the bill is to prevent accidental overdose deaths from opioid use. Author: Associated Press Updated: 12:12 PM PDT April 23, 2021
SACRAMENTO, Calif The California Senate has approved a bill that would allow give opioid users a place to inject drugs in supervised settings in San Francisco, Oakland and Los Angeles County.
The goal of the bill is to prevent accidental overdose deaths from opioid use. The so-called safe injection sites have emerged around the world in recent years. It s part of a movement to rethink treatment for people addicted to powerful opioids.
The federal government has sued to block the sites in the United States. But state Sen. Scott Wiener, author of the bill, said he hopes President Joe Biden s administration will allow states to launch their own pilot programs.