On Monday, 1/29/18 NINE Rainmakers headed to Albany to advocate for the #EndOverdoseNY Campaign. We had an AMAZING time!
We attended a legislative briefing in the morning and I was asked to speak there as a family member and upstate NY Advocate, so I shared what was going on in, this is what I had to say:
“In Upstate NY:
– Our treatment centers are a total abstinence based system.
– People are discharged from treatment for ‘noncompliance’ which could even be smoking a cigarette. And I told about our Rainmaker Anna‘s son Tim who was discharged from a facility for smoking and died that night from a heroin overdose.
– There’s an 18 month wait list for the methadone clinic and outpatient clinics have been known to tell young women, that if they get pregnant, they can get a slot much easier.
– To get into some of our upstate NY Suboxone programs people have to prove “they want it badly enough” in some cases even being forced to write essays about why they should be granted access to the program. Could you imagine if someone with diabetes had to write an essay to receive insulin? We cannot tolerate this.
– In Upstate NY, rural communities have very little access to treatment and even less to Harm Reduction and they live in communities where they are at the mercy of the pharmacist to provide them with clean syringes and where the stigma is strong, in many cases, they do not.
– Did you know across all of New York, it is optional for EMS agencies to carry Naloxone? We have brought this to the attention to our lawmakers over and over again and we have YET to see a bill introduced mandating that it be carried. Why does this matter? Because in Upstate NY, in many rural communities, the EMS agencies prefer NOT to save the life of a substance user and therefore still refuse to carry Naloxone, in the middle of a health care crisis. Imagine that?
– Across New York it is OPTIONAL for schools to have Naloxone on premises even with the rise of opioid use among young people. And in Upstate NY, many schools do NOT have it on premises.
– In Upstate NY the war on drugs is alive and thriving! We have rogue DA’s, Sheriffs and small town police agencies out to pad their resumes with the arrest and conviction of those addicted and suffering. We memorialized 89 people in our Trail of Truth walk for those lost to substance use related causes and over 50% of them had served time incarcerated at some point in time. Many of them losing their lives shortly after being released from jail or prison.
– In Upstate NY, as public compassion increases, police agencies are DOUBLING down, increasing rhetoric ESPECIALLY as it relates to “drug dealers”. And outrageous things are happening, such as a recent arrest in our area by a guy who is addicted and sold TWO baggies, a street value of $20, who now faces a sentence of THREE years in State Prison.
– In Upstate NY, police are using surveillance around the homes of where overdoses have occurred.
– In Upstate NY, racism is alive and thriving and the numbers of our own county jail prove that. In Broome County, persons of color make up less than 5% of our population, but make up 28% of our jail population. And many police agencies exploit the arrests of persons of color by posting them on social media as bragging rights.
– In Upstate NY, in our county jail, SEVENTY FIVE percent of the population is made up of UNCONVICTED persons. By law, innocent!
– In Upstate NY, you a jail sentence could be a DEATH sentence, in particular in Broome County FIVE people have died in 5 years in our jail, 2 that we know of were from improper detox.
– In Upstate NY and in particular, our county, for years we have watched the budget to the health department, social services, the public defender and mental health get cut… while we have inflated the budgets of the Sheriff’s Department, the DA and even the Coroner.
That is what is going on in Upstate NY and why we must continue to fight!
We then met with our Senator, Fred Akshar who welcomed us even 1/2 hour late and spent a considerable amount of time with us. We were able to explain the entire End Overdose Campaign to him and even highlight some of the specific ways to help related to the points. Each Rainmaker was able to introduce themselves and tell their personal story. Keven Revier, one of our Rainmakers was challenged on his views of decarceration and did a fantastic job responding! Corky Clark got to share how important it was to her granddaughter that the Senator always remembered her when he saw her. We reminded him again about the lack of a requirement for EMS agencies to carry Naloxone. We urged him to ensure schools in his district have it on premises. We requested funding for our overdose prevention program. And we told him Truth Pharm desperately needs funding as a family resource center in Broome County. We promised to meet again on that soon.
We then attended the press conference for the release of Assemblywoman Rosenthal’s bill A. 8534 The Safer Consumption Services Act. I was able to speak there as well! Watch here!
We then were able to pull our Assemblywoman Donna Lupardo from the floor of the Assembly. She brought us into the chambers and had our picture taken, she then listened to our needs to End Overdose in NY and we then pitched the Safer Consumption Services Act to her and she said she absolutely would sign on! THEN she took us on a special tour to see the Governor’s Hall and many parts of the Capitol we had never seen. We had an amazing time.
AND THEN (!) as if this all wasn’t enough, on our way home we got to listen to the Kingfisher Project’s broadcast of an interview with one of our youngest Rainmakers, Rhiley who has successfully advocated to have the staff in her school trained in Naloxone use and may be opening the door to having students also trained! Listen here!
An AMAZING day of Rainmaking!