Home California Supervised Sites for Drug Use Bill Delayed Until Next Year

Supervised Sites for Drug Use Bill Delayed Until Next Year

by ECT
Senator Scott Wiener

It was announced Tuesday that Senate Bill 57, a bill that would give opioid users a place to inject drugs in supervised settings, will not be heard in the State Assembly this year.

The announcement was made by the bills author, State Senator Scott Wiener–the bill will be heard next January.

The bill would:

This bill would, until January 1, 2027, authorize the City and County of San Francisco, the County of Los Angeles, the City of Los Angeles, and the City of Oakland to approve entities to operate overdose prevention programs for persons that satisfy specified requirements, including, among other things, providing a hygienic space supervised by trained staff where people who use drugs can consume preobtained drugs, providing sterile consumption supplies, providing access or referrals to substance use disorder treatment, and that program staff be authorized and trained to provide emergency administration of an opioid antagonist, as defined by existing law.

The bill would require the City and County of San Francisco, the County of Los Angeles, the City of Los Angeles, and the City of Oakland, prior to authorizing an overdose prevention program in its jurisdiction, to provide local law enforcement officials, local public health officials, and the public with an opportunity to comment in a public meeting. The bill would require an entity operating a program to provide an annual report to the city or the city and county, as specified. The bill would exempt a person from, among other things, civil liability, professional discipline, or existing criminal sanctions, solely for good faith actions, conduct, or omissions in compliance with an overdose prevention program authorized by the city or the city and county.

The bill would clarify that the Medical Board of California or the Osteopathic Medical Board of California is authorized to take disciplinary action against a licensee related to the operation of an overdose prevention program that violates the Medical Practice Act.

Here is the statement by Senator Scott Wiener:

Senator Wiener’s Statement on SB 57 — Authorizing Safe Consumption Sites — Being Heard in January

SACRAMENTO – Senate Bill 57, authored by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), will be heard in the Assembly Health Committee in January. Senator Wiener released the following statement:

“The Assembly Health Committee has informed me that it will not be hearing Senate Bill 57 — our safe consumption sites legislation — this year and will instead hear and act on the bill this coming January. Because we are in the first year of a two-year legislative session, the bill can be heard during either year. In other words, SB 57 is very much alive, albeit delayed. The Chair of the Committee has assured me that the bill will be heard in January.

“While I’m extremely disappointed that we are experiencing another delay in passing this life-saving legislation — which has passed both the Senate and Assembly twice in different forms over the past five years — I continue to be optimistic that we‘ll pass SB 57 and get it signed into law. San Francisco and other California cities are experiencing record overdose deaths, and safe consumption sites are a proven strategy to save lives and help people into recovery. I am deeply committed to this legislation — as is our broad coalition — and I look forward to moving SB 57 forward in January.

“I do believe we will pass SB 57 next year. It passed the Senate this year, and the Assembly Health Committee has repeatedly passed the bill over the past five years. I’m optimistic that the Committee will, indeed, pass the bill in January. Moreover, we recently amended the bill to include the City of Los Angeles as one of the pilot cities, based on the recent 14-1 vote by the Los Angeles City Council asking to be included. SB 57 will thus be a pilot for San Francisco, Oakland, the City of Los Angeles, and Los Angeles County.

“In the meantime, I’ll continue to work this year toward new innovative approaches to address addiction and overdoses in our communities. I recently obtained $4.2 million in the state budget to fund a meth sobering center in San Francisco, and I’m authoring Senate Bill 110, which legalizes contingency management — financial incentives for people to stop using meth and stay sober. I’m also authoring Senate Bill 221 to ensure that people with mental health and substance use disorder needs receive timely access to care. Last year, I authored, and we passed, Senate Bill 855, which is the broadest and strongest mental health parity law in the country.

“I’m committed to this fight for our community’s future. We will get it done.”

You may also like

3 comments

Street-Sweeper Jul 7, 2021 - 5:55 am

Where does the insanity of these type of proposals end?

So the answer, is to give these losers a safe haven to do their illegal activity?

The constant coddling of society just makes them more dependent on others.

Robert C. Jul 7, 2021 - 8:40 am

“This fight for our community’s future”? Geez. Wiener has to be at the top of the list for fuzzy liberal “logic.”

If you want to fight for the community’s future, Senator, then support drug abuse TREATMENT instead of spending tax dollars enabling drug use.

Jergenson Jul 13, 2021 - 1:26 am

This Wiener guy is totally insane! It seems he was elected by people who should not be permitted to vote!

Comments are closed.