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Needles everywhere: Newmarket Square businesses, residents and police face onslaught of used needles

The Southampton/Crosstown Safety Task Force met this morning to survey the mounting problem of drug addicts discarding ever growing numbers of needles in the streets and on the sidewalks of the Newmarket Square area - home to a number of programs for drug addicts and the homeless.

A landscaper working the grounds of a hotel in the area recently got pricked by a needle. State Police sweep Melnea Cass Boulevard near the I-93 connector every two to three weeks for needles and now find an average of 450 needles on the ground. They put up a "sharps" container for people to dispose of needles, but it was promptly stolen.

Boston and Transit Police say they get people to shelters or programs only to see them back out on the streets again. Continued problems caused by the closing of Long Island a year ago aren't helping.

A resident who attended the session filed the following report:

A D4 police rep feels a big problem with needles is people do not have to turn in used needles to exchange for new ones. "It is not an exchange program, you just get new needles."

A Health Department rep said City Hall Property Management is delaying Sharps container centers. Police want the Sharps container centers up ASAP. City Hall is "forming the policy." One task force member worried nothing will be done until some kid picks one up sticks himself and gets sick. "Then the policy will be tomorrow."

The Health Department rep says the city is seeing people come here from other cities even states to use the facilities, shelters here in Boston. There are a lot of people banned/barred from city shelters; a lot if not all those folks are also barred from Pine Street, etc.

Police now regularly patrol the area on bicycles and say their goal is to get people into treatment rather than jail. A Transit Police officer said his department's arrests are actually down for them in the area. Most of the people they do arrest are repeat offenders. Also: They are having a problem with loiterers and couples who can't reside together in shelters.

B2 police rep says most of the calls they now respond to are medical in nature and that homeless are moving into Dudley Square: "Something we have never seen before." In Newmarket Square itself, people are moving out of apartments on Pompeii Street because of all the addicts and the problems they are causing. The meeting was held at the Metro Credit Union, across the street from Victoria's Diner, whose owner said her security guard was assaulted and she now has customers who no longer feel safe going there.

Methadone, Klonopin, K2 are big problems, police say. Gabapentin (Johnnys) is a big problem as it enhances methadone. "A lot of these people aren't homeless - they're just addicts," one officer said. Says 1st of the month always shows a massive influx (SSI checks etc.). Methadone clinic gives out around 450 doses a day.

Public Health is pushing for "sobering center" Problem is "time and money." Police officer worried about the liability with a sobering center.

A Worcester Square resident said residents don't know what to do when they find used needles. The city's 311 needle-reporting system needs more publicity.

Some people are trying to get bus shelters removed or moved due to people congregating, but there's a problem with ADA compliance and moving the shelters and benches. Also removing shelters or seats sort of screws people who want to catch the bus.

Earlier:
Volunteer pricked by needle while cleaning up North End bocce courts.

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Comments

The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

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Yeah, the better answer is obviously to restrict access to syringes, thus guaranteeing Boston a hepatitis or AIDS outbreak of its own. (N.B.: even if you don't give addicts access to clean syringes, they will use the ones they have until they're too dull to puncture a vein, and *then* they'll throw them on the ground)

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Hence the "good intentions" part.

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If you are blaming this problem on clean needle programs, for which there is a rich addiction and public health literature and a couple decades of surveillance and follow up study, you might try googling for some supportive information. It won't kill you.

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That place is a gauntlet now. Park at the lights on Melnea Cass and you are attacked by windshield cleaners, cigarette hustlers, change junkies and dirtbags. I feel as though I am in a zombie film whenever I drive through there. Really feel bad for those people who stay at the Crosstown Hotel there and the Roundhouse. Not only do you have ambulances 24/7 coming out of the Boston Medical, but you are surrounded by the biggest winners in Boston. It's pretty funny when you see a family from Omaha, fanny packs and tucked in Margaritaville shirts, waiting at the bus stops there, surrounded by what looks the deathly version of the Beastie Boys and Bel Biv Devoe. Uncle Olympics would've cleaned that place up nice. Oh well.

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IMAGE(http://i.imgur.com/e6OI4V9.jpg)

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Closing Long Island and having them back in the City, all day everyday, has been such a scourge for Boston.

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"“The fact that we haven’t relocated all the programs from Long Island certainly doesn’t make me happy,” he said in a telephone interview. “I know there are people struggling. We have to do a better job.”

Over the past year, the city has spent about $17 million to tear down Long Island Bridge, but Walsh said he hasn’t had any conversations with other officials about whether to rebuild it.

As for the future of Long Island, a valuable, 225-acre stretch of vacant buildings and fallow farmland in the middle of Boston Harbor, Walsh said: “I haven’t really thought about it. Dollars are scarce.”"

From the Boston Globe

Dollars are probably scarce because we spend them on things like expensive lawyers to fight a casino which is opening in another town.

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It boggles the mind that anybody thinks that spreading them out across neighborhoods is an OK thing to do. Poor Mattapan, aren't some of them going to the old hospital? As if they didn't have enough problems already.

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as opposed to concentrating them in one neighborhood? I mean--if you don't have an actual island--how do you decide which neighborhood gets to carry the burden?

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"I really haven't thought about it"?

It's probably the biggest under developed asset the city has - if we're going to use it for social services, then budget to reopen it. If we're going to let private development help underwrite establishing a city park out there along with the other stuff, let's get that going. But no, he wants to focus on kicking out the employers of 900 working class people in Widett because that's a shinier object to chase.

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too valuable to be used for the homeless and druggies. It'll be developed.

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Bingo!

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I'm in favor of a mixed use development with a large swath of public access parks vs. hiding the addicts and homeless out on an island, but it at least requires thinking about it and talking about it. By his own words, Walsh has done neither.

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I've driven the Long Island bridge before it was tore down and it was a pretty scary endeavor. I get the feeling it'll be sold for luxury condos at some point. Not saying they should've dropped all these people off in the middle of the city, but just leaving them there literally on an island wouldn't have worked either.

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Has nothing to do with the amount of addicts in this section of Boston. It's been referred to as Methadone Mile long before the Long Island bridge closed.

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Closing a treatment center has boatloads ... or shall we say busloads ... to do with the number of addicts roaming the city, and neighborhoods where they seek shelter in particular.

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Feel free to cite some sources here.

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I've been periodically walking from my home in the South End to my business at Newmarket since 1988. the situation in 2015 is far worse than I've ever seen. I now walk up Albany St. rather than Mass Ave. because of the crowds, particularly at the Dunkin Donuts, navigate the street activity on Mass Ave. for two blocks to cross Melnea Cass, and then take Gerard St. to Atherton St. rather than continuing on Mass Ave., as the width and traffic does not allow for easily crossing Mass Ave. to avoid any drug trafficking.

Also, the level of theft and break-ins in the Newmarket neighborhood is sky-rocketing.

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It absolutely has to do with the increase of addicts and homeless everywhere. With Long Island, at least they could stay on the island during the day if there was no need for them to come to the city. If they did need to come into the city, there were buses taking them back when done with their business. Now they are here and do not leave.That area and the walk to Andrew has always been methadone mile, but its worse than ever now and spreading out all over the city not just around the methadone clinics. No more dosing them up for the day and hiding them back on an island. The problem is right here in our faces and its scary and dangerous.

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Agree it was bad but it is getting dramatically worse by the day. Police presence inadequate. Too likely something horrible will happen. Actually already has.

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They would leave Long Island during the day, when it was open, and were bused into the city. They MBTA bus would bring them back to LI in the evening. (True for the shelter, not sure for the programs)

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Amazon sells needle disposal kits fairly cheap. Businesses in the affected area can keep their property clean until a longer term solution is developed. One I saw held 300. If the problem out your front door is bigger than that, I'd think about moving. Handling of needles is dangerous but an unfortunate reality for now.

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I wonder how many people would rethink visiting a business that has sharps containers bolted to the building.

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Better that than needles on the ground.

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How about every fire station/police station/Hospital give away free sharp containers? A friend of mine down the cape recently moved back to Boston and went to a firehouse asking for a sharps container (I guess they give them out in Sandwich and other parts of the cape) for their son who has diabetes.

Anyway, Boston does not do this, and it may help.

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It might be a stretch to get junkies to carry them around, but they could be placed in areas with problems and collected by groundskeepers.

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According to Adam's write up the Staties put one up along Melnea Cass and it was stolen in one day. They'll have to find a more secure location or mounting methodology, but I suspect they're not feeling very positive about it.

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"We tried it once and they stole it. It's their own fault if they don't have one."

Either that, or that was the last available sharps container in the commonwealth.

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Typical Mass response

You really hate it here, don't you?

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And people expected ...

I haven't looked into how other communities have dealt with the issue, but there is probably a tolerable solution out there. If a user could put something in his or her pocket, and trade it in when picking up clean needles, that would be an improvement.

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I wonder how hard it is to put a needle in a sharps container, when you're nodding off. (Not being facetious) I imagine folks would steal or try to break open said sharps container, if they were in need of a syringe. Addicts are very resourceful.

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I thought that out-of-staters were coming to MA only for our welfare programs (and the state-paid hotel rooms)? Interesting to know they're coming for the drugs and the shelters as well.

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I don't think Long Island can be developed. It is part of the Boston Harbor Island National Park. There might be an exception for the hospital buildings.

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Take an empty 1 gal. detergent/bleach bottle (don't use drink bottles!) fill with water and 1 cup of bleach, voila'! Sharps container.

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Does it require a hazardous waste sticker?

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Using bleach or detergent containers for sharps was an accepted use for people with diabetes. Now it is now against the law in Massachusetts to use containers that end up in the trash..

Platic containers are sent to recycle facilities - many of which which have staff hand sorting from a conveyor belt. You could be putting those people at risk.

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I understand some may think this is not PC or even nice and decent but the following would take care of the problem eventually...

We may be looking at this the wrong way. Instead of trying to get rid of drugs how about we increase the amount of drugs. Just the right kind of drugs. For instance we flood the street with heroin lined with fentanyl or just krokodil. The hard core junking will probably overdose and die within a year. Everyone else would follow after. The problem would solve itself by the end of winter.

OR... OR we could take some of that sweet sweet luxury housing in Chinatown and create methadone clinics / rehab facilities.

Or...Or just ship them all out to New Hampshire.

Look I'm just throwing out ideas here. God knows Walsh has not done anything to help.

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So your solution to a needle disposal problem is to dispose of actual human beings?

Words fail me.

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But really though, it is a ridiculous situation when these people with these heavy addictions lower quality of life for everyone else. They drain city resources, create safety hazards (needles, feces, crossing the street in traffic at these mass ave intersections), and increase crime (muggings, smash & grabs).

Would any of you want this happening on your doorstep? I know I wouldn't.

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Do you know what is really appalling?

Junkies falling down in front of cars on Mass Ave while trying to wash windows with a dirty rag. Its watching people shoot up on the Mass Ave Connector and splayed out next to the food bank fence or under the bridge.

But most importantly it is innocent people raking leaves to clean up a park or kids walking to school getting stuck with dirty needles. That is truly appalling.

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That said, it's a tough one. The "quality of life" the majority of these folks seem to have is about the bleakest thing I can imagine and it's impossible to calculate the misery they're inflicting on their loved ones and kids (and post Bella, we know exactly how grim that can get) let alone the poor folks who are in for potentially deadly illnesses after helpfully tidying up a playground or raking some leaves.I wouldn't go so far as to say that their life has no value but it doesn't seem like much of a life either.

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I think that was a clumsy attempt at channeling Swift's "A Modest Proposal."

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...under the sea!

There'll be no accusations, just friendly crustaceans! Under the sea!

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for proper disposal. Why isn't this already the law? It would eliminate this problem.

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You can't get syringes without a prescription but it's unclear where the new needles are coming from--it sounds as if there's been a breakdown in the "exchange" part of the needle exchange programs that may operate locally. It seems logical that if a dirty, blunted needle acts as currency for a new one, then they won't be casually discarded.

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You actually don't need a prescription to buy syringes from a pharmacy. You only have to be over 18.

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Anyone want to put bets on how many of these people are actually Bostonians versus making their way here from the suburbs and NH?

but BOOHOO DON'T TAX THE WESTERN PART OF THE STATE TO SUPPORT THE CITY NOOOOO

This is a statewide problem why can't we get a statewide effort instead of relying on an idiot like Marty

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