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- New York through the eye of a needle
- First published: The Face, Oct. 1992
-
- (c) Peter McDermott
- peter@petermc.demon.co.uk
-
- East Third Street runs between Avenues A and B on the Lower East Side of
- Manhattan. Also known as Alphabet City, or Loisaida to the Hispanics
- whose numbers dominate the area, it lies between Little Italy, the
- spiritual home of the Mafia even if today all the wiseguys live out in
- Queens or Long Island, and the East Village, where New York beatniks
- gave birth to our modern global drug subculture.
-
- The area has always been a major centre for the narcotics trade. The
- term 'smack' originated here in the 1930's when the area was dominated
- by Jewish immigrants. The term is derived from the Yiddish word
- "schmecker", meaning taste. In the 1970╒s the area was settled by Puerto
- Rican immigrants, a community that was exploited by Andy Warhol and
- Paul Morrissey in Bad, a film about a family of heroin dealers. By all
- accounts, heroin dealing was out of control in the area in 1978 when
- New York police mounted Operation Pressure Point. Pressure Point was
- aimed at closing down the area╒s drug markets and was hailed as a great
- success. Today, on East Third Street a casual passer-by would notice
- nothing untoward. Small groups of African Americans and Hispanic
- people of all ages, hang out on the stoop or outside the bodega, drinking,
- talking, watching the evening go by.
-
- With closer scrutiny though, you can pick up on the barely
- subcutaneous activity of the street. A black man in his late forties walks
- around in circles, jabbering to himself. Occasionally he bends to
- examine a white pebble or a piece of paper. The homeboys call it
- 'Ghostbusting', the tendency to see pieces of crack everywhere after
- you╒ve smoked up all of your own supply. As you walk along the street,
- Puerto Rican youths whisper offers of "Poison" and "Cash". They don╒t
- whisper it to just anyone, but if you╒ve got that look about you, the high
- cheekbones and sallow skin, you can connect.
-
- "Poison" and "Cash" are two of the brand names of the local heroin,
- stamped on the glassine bags that the drug comes wrapped in. New York
- drug dealers seem to go in for sophisticated marketing technique. No old
- pieces of tinfoil or wraps of cling-film here. It isn╒t unusual to see a
- crack dealer studying Donald Trump╒s book, ╘The Art of The Deal╙, and
- even the smallest amounts come packaged in a manufactured plastic vial
- with different coloured tops. Some people say that the different brands
- are an attempt to build brand loyalty. Others say that if you╒re caught
- selling crack in red capped vials or ╥Satisfaction╙ instead of ╥Heavy D.╙
- then you╒re likely to end up with a bullet in the head.
-
- Halfway down the street, a loose line of people stand outside a house.
- Lookouts sit on the sidewalk opposite, watching the street. A black man
- with the confidence of a night-club bouncer keeps the line in order.
- One by one, punters disappear into the doorway, pick up a couple of dime
- bags of coke, and then hustle away down the street. On the corner of the
- street, where it meets Avenue B, a thin woman propositions customers.
- "Sealed works? Three dollars apiece." Syringes are on sale at most
- dealing locations, though sometimes they have already been used and
- the package resealed. You pay your money and you take your chance.
-
- Locations like these exist all over New York, but are heavily
- concentrated in certain areas. Despite the recession and the war on
- drugs, business is booming. Police claim one local enforcer takes over $1
- million a year by leasing spots to drug dealers on a single block in
- Harlem. Throughout the eighties, crack increasingly dominated
- traditional heroin areas like Harlem and the Lower East Side, but heroin
- is making a comeback. Purity levels on the street are up from around 4%
- in the late seventies to 40% last year. DEA intelligence reports that the
- Colombian cartel, having saturated the market with cocaine, has begun
- to grow opium poppies. The Lower East Side is where the dope ends up,
- Manhattan╒s most notorious heroin location.
-
- Tonight though, something is amiss. Junkies and dealers alike are
- hovering uneasily, looking anxious. A patrol car drives around the
- block, teasing the homeboys and at the end of the street, a fat white guy
- in a baseball jacket who even to my untrained eye is obviously a cop,
- hangs out on a stoop alone, scoping the place out. The scrutiny has put
- the dampers on trade. Later that night, I catch the T.V. News and
- discover that earlier that day Curtis Sliwa, pugnacious spokesman for the
- Guardian Angels, had been the victim of an assassination attempt on that
- very block. He had hailed a taxi outside his Tompkins Square apartment
- that morning but instead of driving across town, the taxi took a left and
- headed down Avenue B. Curtis realised something was amiss when an
- armed man popped up from the front of the cab and shot him in the
- stomach, thigh and groin. As the assassin steadied his aim at Curtis's
- head, he managed to scramble out of the window. Sliwa╒s wife, Lisa was
- claiming that police resentment at the Guardian Angel╒s activities was
- preventing the shooting from being thoroughly investigated. Whatever
- the truth of the matter, New York╒s Finest were all over the block that
- night and as far as trade was concerned, it was strictly no way, Jose.
-
- Anyway, after ten minutes waiting, Michael and David, my guides to the
- dealing spots of Alphabet City reluctantly decide to try to cop elsewhere.
- We didn╒t have far to walk. Two blocks south, across East Houston, right
- near Katz's Deli is a similar spot. Unlike Avenue B, there is no police
- scrutiny here, so we load up on 'Heavy D' and $20 half-gram bags of coke
- from the bodega then retreat to their loft in Soho for the night
-
- * * *
-
- Today, the United States has about a million injecting drug users. One
- quarter of them live in New York City. By the point in the mid-eighties
- when epidemiologists identified injecting drug use a major route for the
- transmission of HIV, the virus had already hit New York City hard. Today,
- research shows that fifty per cent of the city╒s intravenous drug users
- have been infected. The virus has since been passed on to their children,
- their sexual partners and their partners╒ partners. The vast majority of
- these people are black and Hispanic and most of America couldn╒t care
- less whether they live or die.
-
- My friend Edith works as an AIDS trainer. As an ex- addict herself, she
- works in her chosen field out of emotional necessity ╤ the AIDS virus has
- claimed the lives of half of her community. Now in her mid-forties, she
- spent most of the sixties shooting heroin on the Lower East Side. Edith
- explained how the infection spread so rapidly. ╙New York has always
- had laws prohibiting the possession of syringes and needles. Junkies
- would travel from their own neighbourhood to the Lower East Side or
- Harlem to cop, because the dope was cheaper and better quality in those
- places. You wanted to try the drugs before parting with all your money,
- and you didn't want to be arrested in possession of a works. So you╒d slip
- into a shooting gallery to test the dope. For a few dollars you could use
- the room, rent a works and get high.╙ In galleries across the city,
- needles were passed indiscriminately from arm to arm, and along with
- each hit went the deadly virus.
-
- When British health officials recognised that injecting drugs was a route
- for transmitting the virus, needle and syringe exchange programmes
- were rapidly established. Drug policy in Britain was always pragmatic,
- based on a medical model rather than a law-enforcement model. Drug
- policy in America has always been shaped by racism, politicians and the
- media successfully labelling drug users as the enemy within since the
- 1920╒s. As a result, meaningful AIDS prevention for injecting drug users
- has been virtually non-existent in many parts of the USA.
-
- * * *
-
- Lena has used heroin since she was seventeen. Today, at 43, she is no
- longer addicted to heroin. She does have AIDS. The city council are
- responsible for housing people who have AIDS and have taken her off
- the streets and found her in a room in a single occupancy hotel. A
- welfare hotel. A crack hotel. A place where everybody, employees and
- residents alike, smokes crack.
-
- Lena is unsure how or when she contracted the disease. As we talk, she
- cooks up a rock of crack.
-
- "I've always been around dope. My mom and dad both used heroin,
- and most of the people in my neighbourhood liked to get high,
- smoke a little reefer. I used to turn tricks to pay for dope.
- Eventually, dope got too expensive and I couldn't afford to get
- high anymore. Then crack showed up."
-
- "I don't know whether I got AIDS from a needle, from a boyfriend,
- or from a trick. I do know that my time is nearly up. My social
- worker say that I shouldn't be gettin╒ high, because it damages the
- immune system. But nearly everybody in this hotel use crack. If
- they ain't smokin' it, they sellin' it. I don't know how long I got
- left, but gettin' high helps me pass the time.╙
-
- Access to clean needles might have saved Lena. Aseptic injection
- equipment will almost certainly shorten her life, introducing bacteria
- into her bloodstream that her depleted immune system is unable to fight
- off.
-
- * * *
-
- "There is a higher goal than the reduction of transmission of HIV,
- and that goal is the elimination of use of illegal narcotics by
- injection, period."
- NYC Health Commissioner, Woodrow Myers. WCBS Radio, 6 June
- 1990
-
- "It's a wonderful goal, except that it is not going to be reached
- overnight. What they are saying by setting this goal exclusively
- is that there are a huge number of people out there who are
- expendable."
- Dr. Mathilde Krim, AMFAR. Newsday, 6 June 1990
-
- There has been a consensus among European drug researchers for many
- years over the value of needle exchanges but U.S. politicians chose to
- ignore their recommendations. Evidence that needle exchange
- programmes play a vital role in limiting the spread of HIV was dismissed
- as not relevant to the American situation, and Federal regulations barred
- further research on the issue in the United States. Eventually, in 1988,
- under pressure from drug experts and epidemiologists who were
- studying the spread of AIDS, Mayor Ed Koch established a pilot needle
- exchange programme. Many of those who were involved with the
- programme believe that it was an experiment that was designed to fail.
-
- Koch decided that no needle exchange could be located within 1000 feet
- of a school. This ruled out the possibility of basing the programme
- anywhere near a community. Eventually it was located in the
- Department of Health building, downtown in the business district. It
- faced the Tombs correctional centre where arrested drug users are
- brought handcuffed, to await trial. New York╒s District Attorney
- publicly threatened to arrest anybody who used the scheme for
- possession of drug paraphernalia. In the immediate vicinity of the
- building is the highest concentration of narcotics detectives in the
- western world. The Department of Immigration and the FBI offices are
- also nearby. Places in the programme were limited to 200, out of 250,000
- injectors in the city and to make things worse, each client would only be
- able to exchange a single needle, and in order for the exchange to take
- place, you had to sit around while your old syringe was tested for the
- presence of foreign blood.
-
- Despite these constraints, the programme was regarded as a success. So
- desperate for help are many of New York╒s drug users that the
- programme could attract and retain clients by offering them a route into
- treatment. However, overwhelming political opposition to the
- programme meant that it was doomed before it began. Just one month
- into the programme╒s existence, the city council's Black and Hispanic
- Caucus moved a motion to close the programme, a motion that was carried
- unanimously. Although the council decision was not binding, it sent the
- mayor a signal from the city's political power brokers. When David
- Dinkins was elected as the city's first black mayor, the following year,
- one of his first acts after taking office was to close down the needle
- exchange.
-
- The black politicians and community leaders who opposed needle
- exchange claimed the programme was racist and genocidal. Senator
- Charles Rangel, Democratic representative for Harlem, chairs the
- Congressional Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control. He believes
- that there should be no support for needle exchange programmes as
- ╥they encourage and support drug addiction, while black youth is
- mortally jeopardised by drugs.╙ Yolanda Serrano, a Harlem resident who
- is the Director of ADAPT, an advocacy group for the rights of
- intravenous drug users, disagrees with the Congressman. "He claims
- that Needle Exchange is genocide. In fact, what we have now is
- genocide." Serrano╒s comments were echoed by Charles Eaton, director of
- the pilot needle exchange programme and now a city health official.
- "There is no evidence from any syringe exchange scheme anywhere in
- the world suggesting that they encourage people to inject. Our critics
- argued that we should be putting resources into rehabilitation
- programmes, but the places aren╒t available. We had to continually try
- to remind them that you can't rehabilitate a dead addict."
-
- * * *
-
- A central figure in America╒s struggle for clean needles is Jon Parker, a
- 37 year old ex-addict from Boston. While studying for a Master's Degree
- in Public Health at Yale, Parker heard the director of an English Needle
- Exchange scheme speak in Boston. Fired with enthusiasm, Parker took it
- upon himself to get needles out onto the streets. In August 1988, he was
- arrested for possessing illegal drug paraphernalia ╤.syringes. Parker
- fully expected to go to jail for his actions, but in January 1990, in the
- case of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts versus Jon Parker, he was
- acquitted. The judge found that though he had violated the law, Jon
- Parker's illegal action was justified by the severity of the AIDS epidemic.
- The Drug Policy Foundation, a Washington pressure group, awarded
- Parker $100,000 for risking imprisonment in his act of civil
- disobedience. Though the federal government still regards them as
- criminals, some Americans view the guerilla needle exchanges as
- modern-day heroes.
-
- Like Parker, America╒s gay activists have long been critical of US AIDS
- policy, arguing the disease has received insufficient priority because it
- was ╘only╒ killing gay men. Eventually, some of those activists began to
- take a wider perspective. If the lives of gay men are undervalued, how
- about the lives of homeless black and Hispanic people who shoot up
- drugs? In February 1990, Rod Sorge and some other members of ACT UP
- got together with Jon Parker and occupied the intersection of Essex and
- Delancey, another copping block on the Lower East Side. Over on the
- opposite corner, the Guardian Angels staged a counter demonstration. As
- ACT UP distributed needles, bleach and AIDS education materials, the
- Angels stood chanting "No drugs, no needles!" Eventually, ten members
- of the group were arrested. In May 1991, Judge Laura Drager handed
- down her decision in the ACT UP case. Once again, the court found that
- the AIDS epidemic was such a grave medical emergency that the
- defendants were justified in their actions.
-
- * * *
-
- I went to New York to find out what makes people risk imprisonment to
- supply syringes and needles to a group of people that the dominant
- society sees as worthless and undeserving. Joyce is a Puerto Rican
- woman in her late twenties. Joyce understands discrimination. Her
- extraordinarily beautiful eyes move rapidly from a smile to betray her
- anger about the impact of racism in the melting pot of New York City,
- racism that affects her both as an individual, and as a member of a
- minority community. At university, Joyce was made aware that of her
- fellow students view: that she was only there because she was a minority
- woman, not because she had ability. She believes she suffers from the
- same discrimination in her job as a researcher. Like many of the key
- players in this drama, Joyce is not her real name. She must remain
- anonymous because the organization that she works for receives money
- from both the state and federal government. If they got wind of her
- activities, then either Joyce would lose her job or the agency would lose
- its funding.
-
- Like many of those involved in needle exchange, Joyce views heroin
- addiction somewhat differently to most people employed in the drugs
- field. Once again, her perspective has been shaped by her personal
- experience of drugs rather than government and media drug war
- ideology.
-
- "I don't use drugs myself, but I grew up in the South Bronx where
- heroin use was all around me. Both of my parents were addicts, so
- I get so angry when I see the way that drug users are portrayed
- by the media and by drugs researchers. All of their lives are
- reduced to their drug use. In fact, drugs are just a minor part of
- their lives. First, addicts are people ╤ workers, housewives,
- mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, members of a community."
-
- "Though I don't live there any more, I still regard the South Bronx
- as my community and I want to try to give something back. In
- fact, I do very little, I was a catalyst but the community is really
- doing it for themselves. My needle exchange operates on a
- dealing street. It couldn't happen without the permission of the
- dealer, but he too is a member of that community and he cares
- what happens there. He sees that this thing is in everybody╒s
- interests and gives me protection. Today, the exchange is run by
- the clients. When I arrive on Saturday morning, the people are
- all there, waiting to help me set up the table, making up kits,
- giving out leaflets."
-
- This trend towards getting the local community involved in syringe
- exchange is evident in all of the five voluntary syringe exchanges that
- are currently operating. Organised by a combination of activists and
- health care workers, many of those who are involved, like Joyce, have
- personal experience of drug use that provides them with a motivation
- that goes far beyond some abstract sense of solidarity with the
- underclass. However, this experience of drug use is often the only point
- of contact between the predominantly white, middle class volunteers,
- and the lumpenproletariat that that constitutes the clientele.
-
- * * *
-
- Saturday morning, 10.00 am. I have arranged to visit the syringe
- exchange scheme that operates on the Lower East Side. Volunteers meet
- at a street corner that is publicised by leaflets that circulate
- surreptitiously among injectors. Half of the volunteers occupy a static
- site, while the other half will tour the neighbourhood. I decide to take
- the grand tour. At 10.30 we take off and as soon as we walk down the
- street, we are recognised by a handsome Latino man and his girlfriend.
- They come over and ask us for works. In their late twenties and smartly
- dressed, nobody would suspect that they are both injectors. They tell us
- that they only do dope occasionally, a factor that potentially puts them at
- greater risk. Confirmed junkies have their own works, but impulse
- users can get caught short and may use someone else's. We give them
- syringes and bleach to clean them with, but they don't want condoms.
- Getting the safe sex message across is difficult; the machismo culture of
- Latin American men makes it almost impossible.
-
- As we turning a corner onto Forsyth Street, a handful of people is
- waiting for us to arrive. Most just take the needles and go, but one
- lesbian woman wants some advice on safer sex. The group has a
- counsellor who specialises in giving such advice. As we stand talking,
- we notice that a patrol car has spotted us and although the officers don't
- approach us, they make it obvious that we are under observation.
-
- Eventually, we leave Forsyth and head for the local needle park. Men
- and women of all ages are sitting around, chilling out, copping the rays.
- As we arrive and set up our shop, the park's occupants reveal themselves
- as a total bunch of stone junkies. The homeless and the housed, workers
- and unemployed, black, white, Latino, Jewish. Dealers and consumers.
- All ages. Everybody wants works. Some want more; they want to chat
- about their problems ╤ their upcoming court cases, where they can get
- an AIDS test, how they can get into drug treatment. Almost all of them
- express gratitude that somebody gives enough of a shit to come out and
- do this thing for them.
-
- For me, this gratitude is one of the most surprising aspects of my visit. It
- may be because Britain still has some semblance of a reasonable welfare
- provision, but here, people expect services as a right and confront
- British drugs workers with suspicion and resentment, rarely with
- gratitude. The people who were receiving needles clearly understood
- that they live in a country where neither the government nor the
- majority of the population care whether they live or die.
-
- The patrol car arrives again and parks across the road from us. One
- bedraggled, beaten-up man of about forty comes over to warn us. "I'm
- like, the king of this park. I can tell you what goes down. The cops be
- over there again. Be cool. They won't do anything while you here, but
- as soon as you go, they╒ll roust us." We sit off, eyeing up the cop car
- carefully and handing out the works a little more surreptitiously.
-
- I get into conversation with a black man in his fifties. Married for over
- thirty years, Michael is the father of five girls. He is extremely dapper,
- with shaved head, a Nike shell suit and a beeper, clipped to his pocket.
- We talk about the merits of different drugs and his aversion to
- methadone. "That's bad shit. I'm in a programme now, but only for a
- month. If you don't watch out, you can get a worse habit than the one
- you started with. I first had Methadone tablets, dollies, when I was in the
- Tombs, back in 1960. It was cool, gettin' high every day. Then, I got
- sentenced and went upstate to do my time. Man, to this day I've never
- been so sick." Michael is what used to be known as a righteous dope
- fiend. He always goes to work, pays the mortgage on his co-op and
- supports his family and his habit. The only difference between Michael
- and Mr. Average Joe Public, from White Bread, USA is that Michael╒s
- drug of choice is heroin rather than alcohol. Today, many thousands of
- men like Michael have died of AIDS. Some have infected their wives,
- who in turn have infected their children.
-
- As we sit talking, I contemplate the reasons behind drug prohibition.
- Unlike our legal drugs, alcohol and tobacco, heroin is a fairly safe drug.
- It can cause death through overdose, but the number of people who die
- are very few. They tend to be people who have had their drug use
- interrupted by jail or by rehab, then they get out, get drunk, shoot up
- and choke on the vomit. The use of heroin alone does no organic damage,
- unlike alcohol, which damages the liver, or tobacco, which causes
- bronchitis, emphysemia and lung cancer. There is a great deal of crime
- associated with heroin use. Acquisitive crime, as people steal to pay
- exorbitant black market prices, and violent crime as dealers engage in
- wars to defend their patch. But these are consequences of the illegal
- status of heroin, rather than effects that are attributable to the drug
- itself. So how was it that heroin got such a name, while alcohol and
- tobacco, proven killers, are on sale openly? Well, think about the
- countries where illegal drugs are produced. In the 1920╒s, the US
- government made it illegal to smoke opium, although anybody could
- walk into a pharmacy and buy as much heroin or morphine as they
- wanted. Why? Well, morphine and heroin were used by the white middle
- classes who could afford medical treatment, whereas only the Chinese
- smoked opium....
-
- At around 1.00 PM we arrive at our final destination. Near the end of
- Canal Street is a piece of waste ground. In a city with so many homeless,
- little goes to waste. On a lot about 60 foot square, a shanty town has
- sprung up. Houses have been fashioned out of cardboard, canvas and
- corrugated tin. A tepee stands in the centre. One of the houses bears a
- hand-painted board, evidence of the fact that these dwellings, while
- unfit for animals, are occupied by humans. The sign read
-
- FATHER
- HURT
- YOU WERE NEVER THERE FOR ME
- NEVER HONEST NEVER HELD ME NEVER
- KISSED ME NEVER NOTICED ME NEVER
- FED ME NEVER TOOK ME WITH YOU NEVER
- SHOWED ME ANY EMOTION
- WHY DO I CARE
-
- Halfway across the site, the earth is scorched, and the remnants of
- dwellings bear witness to a horrendous fire. In the centre of the site, a
- hand-fashioned cross bears an inscription. "Mr. Yi-Po Lee. He was one
- of us." A small memorial garden has been planted to commemorate Mr.
- Lee, and a small fence erected to prevent people trampling on the
- flowers. According to Eric, one of the residents, some two weeks before
- our visit there was some dispute over drugs and one of the shacks had
- been torched. The fire spread rapidly, consuming many of the pathetic
- homes that had been erected. Over 100 people lived on the lot before the
- fire. Now there were only between thirty and forty. The old Chinaman
- had died. Though the city does provide some shelter for the homeless,
- conditions in the municipal shelters are so bad that many people prefer
- to take their chances in a cardboard shanty town.
-
- The people that lived there weren't young. These people weren╒t the
- crusty soap dodgers that dominate London╒s squats. Most were in their
- forties or fifties, some were even older. Most had the gaunt, skeletal
- features associated with heavy drug use and AIDS. A man with no legs
- came trundling out of his shack in a wheelchair. Everybody used drugs.
- As the residents brought out their used syringes and collected new ones,
- a neighbour of sorts, a working class black man who lived in an
- apartment across the street, brought a bundle of used clothing onto the
- lot. "If anybody can make use of those," he told one the residents, "well,
- they're welcome to them." As two homeless men argued and fought over
- an old pair of Levi╒s, the look on the donor╒s face conveyed the sense of
- powerless that some New Yorkers feel about the city's inability to
- provide even basic necessities for the sick, the old and the poor.
-
- * * *
-
- When Mayor Dinkins closed down the needle exchange he said "Giving
- out needles gives the wrong message. I think we need to go at fighting
- drug addiction in the first instance and I don't want to give people the
- paraphernalia to continue using drugs." Simplistic rhetoric that betrays
- a politician╒s lack of understanding of the complex role that drugs play
- in twentieth century culture. For the Soho yuppies who took me on my
- tour of the copping spots, drugs are just another commodity in the
- American dream of conspicuous consumption. For the dealers who stand
- on the corners of Stanton, and Forsyth and Orchard and Spring and
- Avenue B and the hundreds of other spots in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and
- the Bronx, selling drugs is one way to ensure that they don't end up in a
- shanty town. For the people condemned to live in shanty towns, drugs
- are a means of survival, a way of facing another day that holds no hope
- of escape from unutterable poverty, while in the midst of unfathomable
- wealth.
-
- Today, there are five syringe exchanges operating in New York. They
- are in the process of transition, currently operating in a twilight zone
- between legality and illegality. At present, they are still technically
- illegal, but there is currently a bill before the New York state legislature
- seeking to change the laws relating to needle possession and
- distribution. Plans to transfer the management of the schemes to
- community organizations are almost complete and Liz Taylor╒s pet AIDS
- charity, AMFAR has set aside a small sum of money to fund them. No
- matter how much money AMFAR provides, it will be too little, too late.
- Add it up. Five needle exchange schemes, each running for a couple of
- hours a week. A quarter of a million injectors in the city, 125,000 of
- them already HIV positive. It╒s like offering an elastoplast to somebody
- who has just been disembowelled. Since the AIDS epidemic began, 20,000
- children in New York City have lost one or more parents to AIDS. Drugs,
- racial tension, street crime and a massive urban underclass are some of
- the biggest problems facing the United States today, but for many right-
- wing politicians, AIDS isn╒t a problem, it╒s a solution. By the year 2,000,
- the number of AIDS orphans in New York City will exceed 100,000.
- Someday, those children will demand answers.
-
- Peter McDermott
- July 7 1992
-
- Since my visit in June, little has changed. Although AMFAR agreed to
- fund the needle exchange programmes, the grant was insufficient to
- cover insurance, so the community groups who were to take over the
- needle distribution have been forced to wait while AMFAR, city and state
- officials argue over who╒ll pay the premiums.
-
- In July, the Democratic convention was held in New York and the city
- made a concerted effort to get the homeless people off the streets. During
- this effort, people who lived the shanty town were evacuated, and their
- homes were cleared by bulldozers. Mr Yi-Po Lee╒s memorial garden has
- been razed to the ground.
-
- P.M. 12/8/92
-