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Sunday, 05/17/2015 10:38:30 PM

Sunday, May 17, 2015 10:38:30 PM

Post# of 28748
From the PC Cess Pool Capital of the World I bring you another sign .......

The END is NEAR!



PS. I guess the Tweakers don't know anything about using a pop can right? LOL!

This ignorant fool in the article doesn't get it he's being used for free pipes.

Hey Seattle why not get it over with and cook up some meth for them all because it's all about being safe right?







Program offers meth pipes to drug users for free in Seattle
By KOMO Staff
Published: May 17, 2015 at 5:43 PM PDT


SEATTLE -- Volunteers behind a needle exchange in Seattle are now handing out meth pipes to drug users for free.

The program is offered 5 days per week off an alley next to a church in Seattle's University District. It was launched by a group called The People's Harm Reduction Alliance about 2 months ago.

The demand for the free meth pipes has been growing ever since, the alliance's executive director said.

"People kept coming to our program and saying that they were getting syringes because they didn't have access to a pipe," said Shilo Murphy.

About 25-30 meth pipes are handed out each day, Murphy said.

The theory behind the program is that by handing out the pipes, some drug users will rely less on needles, Murphy said. That helps cut down on the risk of certain diseases, he added.

"Whatever the reason is why both parties don't have their own… They wind up sharing. Well, this program has prevented that because all it takes is a cut orally and you've transmitted a disease possibly," said Regg Thomas, a drug user for the past 20 years who currently works with the Urban Survivors Union.

Whether the theory for the program actually works is still up for debate. But according to state law, handing out drug paraphenalia like the pipes is illegal.

Murphy said he knows that.

"And so was syringe exchange 25 years ago. And yet we have syringe exchange and it's proven to be one of the biggest HIV prevention tools for injection drug use in the state," Murphy said.

Murphy said the program, which he claims is the first of its kind in the nation, has reduced some risky behaviors and helped get a number of users tested for Hepatitis C. Public Health of Seattle and King County could not be reached for comment Sunday about Murphy's claims.

On top of handing out meth pipes, Murphy said drug users can also pick up wound care kits and get crucial information about treatment options.

"By engaging them, we gave people self worth… Give back people's desire to live better in life and live better in society," Murphy said.

Even though it's illegal under state law to give someone certain kinds of drug paraphenalia, police said they're more concerned with what's put into the pipes and not necessarily the pipes themselves.

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