The New York Post e-Edition

NY’s Drug Surrender

Oct. 7, 2021, will go down in history as the day that New York surrendered in the war on drugs. Not a shot was fired, except for the heroin or meth shot into the vein of a drug addict on the streets of Midtown, the South Bronx or Harlem.

Gov. Hochul last week signed into law a bill pushed by state Sen. Gustavo Rivera (D-Bx) and backed by the city’s Democratic delegation. It decriminalizes the possession or sale of hypodermic needles and syringes by addicts to inject drugs.

Touted as a move to reduce overdose deaths, it will instead be the death of downtowns and residential neighborhoods across the Empire State.

NYPD cops are now under orders to let addicts freely shoot drugs and share needles. The Post had already reported recently on how junkies have overrun parks and other public spaces from Washington Square through Midtown to The Bronx. Hochul & Co. just guaranteed that it’ll grow worse.

“Having drug addicts, a frightful condition, freely injecting drugs and passing out in public is not tenable,” warns Barbara Blair of the Garment District Alliance of the “preposterous” new law. “It was passed under the guise of compassion, but it’s one of the least compassionate bills I’ve seen,” state

Sen. Andrew Lanza (R-SI) told The Post. Needlesharing “contravenes any logical and reasonable science based upon public-health standards.”

Assaults, break-ins and robberies will soar as new addicts join the growing army of drugged zombies inhabiting once-vibrant city streets. City overdose deaths already spiked 36 percent for the year ending March 31; this law will send them higher, not lower as backers imagine.

Hochul has effectively decriminalized drugs by legalizing drug paraphernalia and making substance abuse free of social consequences.

And the law will be near-impossible to repeal unless furious voters besiege the lawmakers who inflicted it. It’ll be a huge battle to do the bare minimum and empower judges to mandate treatment for those caught with still-illegal drugs or who commit other crimes to feed their addiction.

Drug addicts need to hit bottom if they’re ever going to seek treatment. Hochul just denied IV drug users a bottom to hit, i.e., jail — and so pulled the rug from under treatment programs that Rivera & Co. claim to support.

New York is struggling to get back to normal after COVID, but Hochul and the Legislature seem bent on pushing normalcy infinitely far away.

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2021-10-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

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https://nypost.pressreader.com/article/282162179406329

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