New York City Commits to Creating Safe Injection Sites
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio endorsed a plan on Thursday that commits the city to opening four safe injection sites at needle exchange centers, providing drug users with a place to use intravenous drugs like heroin under the supervision of medical professionals. If the plan comes into fruition, New York will be the first city in the United States to host the sites.
According to the New York Times, the city intends to launch a one-year pilot program that would install supervised injection sites at exchange centers in Gowanus, Brooklyn; Midtown West and Washington Heights in Manhattan; and in the Longwood neighborhood of The Bronx. Staten Island—which alongside The Bronx saw the highest rate of opioid deaths in New York in 2016 but experienced a drop in fatalities in 2017—will not be part of the pilot program, as noted by the Staten Island Advance. A record 1,441 people in New York City died of opioid overdoses in 2017, according to a recent study.