Gavin Newsom Vetoes Bill Legalizing 'Safe Consumption Sites' in 3 California Cities
The California governor argued that the bill could lead to "a world of unintended consequences."

On Monday, Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed a bill legalizing "safe consumption sites" in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Oakland. Safe consumption sites, also known as "safe injection sites," are locations where individuals can use illegal drugs in a sanitary area with access to clean needles and staff who can administer drugs like naloxone, which can quickly treat an overdose. Proponents of the legislation argue that the sites are an important harm reduction tool, helping to prevent overdose deaths or the spread of certain diseases, like HIV, that can be spread through intravenous drug use.
"Safe injection sites aren't intended to be some sort of magic solution to a chronic drug addiction crisis; they are intended to reduce the likelihood of users dying," Reason's Scott Shackford wrote after the bill's passage in the state Legislature earlier this month.
Where safe consumption sites are legal, they have proved tremendously effective. As of 2019, one safe consumption site in Vancouver, Canada, has overseen more than 3.6 million instances of drug injection since its opening in 2003. At the site, staff responded to 6,440 overdoses with no deaths. A study examining the site's operations from 2004 to 2008 predicted that, during that period, the site prevented up to 51 deaths. According to NPR, researchers also found no increase in drug usage in the surrounding area.
"Safe consumption sites have been in operation around the world for approximately 30 years, with great success and literally zero overdose deaths," state Sen. Scott Wiener (D–San Francisco), who originally introduced the bill, told CBS Bay Area. "These sites are a proven strategy to reduce overdose deaths, pressure on emergency rooms, and public drug use, while expanding access to drug treatment"
However, Newsom seems unconvinced that safe consumption sites will help the state's drug users. "I have long supported the cutting edge of harm reduction strategies," Newsom wrote in a statement explaining his veto of the bill. "However, I am acutely concerned about the operations of safe injection sites without strong, engaged local leadership, and well-documented, vetted, and thoughtful operational and suitability plans." Newsom further expressed concerns that the bill could lead to "a world of unintended consequences… worsening drug consumption challenges in [Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Oakland] is not a risk we can take."
"It's tremendously frustrating that safe injection sites have met continued resistance at the federal and state levels, including in supposedly liberal states like California," Geoffroy Lawrence, the managing director of drug policy at Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes this website), tells Reason. "While safe injection sites may sound counterintuitive to some people as an effective means to combat addiction, there's no arguing with the data. Results from other countries have shown that safe injection sites lead to a reduction in overdose deaths and transmission rates of infectious disease and an increase in the number of individuals seeking addiction recovery."
It is possible that Newsom's veto of the bill has little to do with the efficacy of safe injection sites and instead is the result of his preparation for a possible presidential run in 2024. On July 4, he placed political ads on several Florida television stations, criticizing Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, also a possible presidential contender. With cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles gaining attention in national media for their homelessness crisis (which is associated with drug use), Newsom could be eager to present a more anti-drug, even "tough on crime" image.
Newsom's presidential ambitions, or simply his desire to appear less soft on crime, might be getting in the way of a safe and effective public health strategy for preventing drug overdoses.
"The American approach to the drug war has historically been about restricting supply when changing demand was always the better approach," said Lawrence. "That's what so-called 'harm reduction' policies, including safe injection sites, are all about."
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Where safe consumption sites are legal, they have proved tremendously effective. As of 2019, one safe consumption site in Vancouver, Canada, has overseen more than 3.6 million instances of drug injection since its opening in 2003. At the site, staff responded to 6,440 overdoses with no deaths. A study examining the site's operations from 2004 to 2008 predicted that, during that period, the site prevented up to 51 deaths. According to NPR, researchers also found no increase in drug usage in the surrounding area.
during the period that Insite has been in operation, drug overdoses have skyrocketed, they have an abysmal track record for successful rehab of anyone who uses the site, and things got so bad in Vancouver, that they proposed roving teams on the street to leave the site and try to give people narcan injections in-situ.
The study that often gets pimped by Insite boosters is one that stopped in something like 2011-- insite was created during a downturn in overdose deaths which continued through ~2011, but then went up sharply. Insite promoters blamed everything else.
Predictions which don't come true are failed predictions.
Saving people who overdose right on the table in front of you, and then do it again next week, and the week after that, and the week after that, and the week after that isn't "effective". Unless your goal is to have as many junkies as possible, but are... as one former addict said, "kept just above rock bottom".
As someone who supports drug legalization, it's a perverse system.
Drugs are kept illegal which... arguably (although I'm not 100% sure this is an absolute truth in every respect for reasons I won't go into here) causes the street drugs to become more dangerous and toxic. The government won't reform that system, but they'll hand you a clean needle, watch you flatline and then revive you and say to the public, "Look how progressive and forward thinking we are."
To wit:
Insite harder.
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Will the lefty pile of shit Entelechy ever find a brain cell.
Eat shit and die, lefty asshole
Oh, and further, the overdose epidemic has gone so bat-shit wild since Insite was created, that the Insite management began to suggest that the drugs be provided TO the junkies-- which if nothing else, seems to be a tacit admission that something ain't quite working.
For people working in the field, the value of supervised injection facilities transcends the debate over death or crime statistics, because it offers something people who use drugs may not have experienced before: a non-judgmental place that accepts them for who they are.
This is where I break out my diabetes analogy...
So break it out, please, I don't get it. Are you saying it's better to be non-judgmental or judgmental about diabetes?
Thanks for digging that up. So what are harm reduction policies that do work for narcotics?
Gavin should have been selected for VP with Biden. It would have cured Biden's hair-sniffing habit.
I thought San Fran already was a safe drug city. Since school children have to wade through the bodies of those either totally whacked out or dead and dying, one would be led to believe Frisco is a free drug city.
Or is it Seattle, or Chicago or Baltimore or Philly......Kensington Ave is a very nice tranquil place where families can stroll along without fear.
Don't leave anything of value in your car whilst visiting San Franshitsco. You will soon find the windows broken out and everything of value stolen...so the poor victims of white supremacy can buy more drugs.
Another year or two of democrat run cities and you can write them off as totally lost. There will be no way to bring them back.
The cities you mention, especially Baltimore and Philly have been that way for decades-I lived in Baltimore 20 years ago and was told by long time residents at the time that nothing had changed about it in 20 years, So I wouldn’t say they will be lost, they’ll just continue along as democrat-controlled shitholes same as always.
Emma Camp, assistant editor at Reason, who lives in Washington DC (According to her LinkedIn profile) should probably visit California before deigning to pass judgement here.
As Reason's own contributor Nancy Rommelmann- who had the decency to visit San Francisco- has documented, these programs are merely ways for the state government to support peoples' drug habits, often by just concentrating themselves into one place where they can setup blinders to hide the depravity.
https://nancyrommelmann.substack.com/p/another-step-backward-the-chesa-boudin?utm_source=%2Fprofile%2F1406219-nancy-rommelmann&utm_medium=reader2
(Search for Tenderloin, and start reading from there).
I can understand if proggies and lefties are confused about this, as this basically amounts to Safety Net for people taking skydives off of the bridge of life. It is the subsidy of depravity. It is welfare of chemical dependence. But for Libertarians to give no skepticism to this program is just terrible blindness.
Gonna' be shitty here.
Saving people who are ODing in these environments is not "saving" anyone. It's just putting off the inevitable for a while longer.
I know a lot of AA types. Addicts who are on methadone, folks who hit rock bottom and have been clean for decades after kicking it. They can go one way or the other. The decision has to be theirs, they won't listen to anyone else, but I know people whose life crashed due to drug abuse and who have come back from it.
I also have known people who spiraled and are now dead.
If you're to the point where you have zero problem shooting up, in public, in full view of the world, your whole life reduced to living in a tent and begging for enough cash to get your next hit and you haven't hit rock bottom? You're done for.
I honestly don't feel like this is where we should be spending public dollars any more than we should be lighting cash on fire and pouring the ashes down the toilet. If someone wants to live like that, I want no part in it.
"Saving people who are ODing in these environments is not "saving" anyone. It's just putting off the inevitable for a while longer."
I would just add a bit of nuance. As you said in the rest of your (great) post, getting off addiction is a personal choice. As is pretty much every other important life choice.
The problem is that these safety nets always run the risk of deferring the decision for people indefinitely. Most people want welfare because it sometimes there is a perfect storm of events that puts a person (or family) near destitute. But implemented poorly, the safety net is no longer there to catch the fallen, but rather a hammock on which they sleep.
As has been seen in SF, these safe consumption centers aren't a safety net. They are hammocks.
Saving people who are ODing in these environments is not "saving" anyone. It's just putting off the inevitable for a while longer.
Reason is unintentionally making an argument to keep brain-dead people hooked to machines in perpetuity, because if it saves one life...
"...Gonna' be shitty here.
Saving people who are ODing in these environments is not "saving" anyone. It's just putting off the inevitable for a while longer..."
Not shitty at all; no one ever "saved" another's life; that person delayed it. That's all.
But for Libertarians to give no skepticism to this program is just terrible blindness.
It's Libertarianism Plus!
Skimming all of the above comments, I generally agree with them.
My summary from what I understand: WTF?!? What the BLOODY fuck??!! Dirt-dwelling bottom-sucking scum can buy and sell poisons, and be supported by Government Almighty "helping" them... Heroin junkies and their supporters / suppliers / sellers operating in broad daylight, in public (Newsom, good job on this one with your veto)... And then white-coated doctors with fancy degrees and licenses, and big pharm companies... Are BUSTED for selling clean, dose-controlled pills for people in horrible pain?!?! What the ever-loving FUCK, here, people?!?!?! Can we reach a MIDDLE ground, and allow a balanced FREE market to operate?
This is indeed a high hurdle to get public sentiment over. They want to keep "good people" from becoming junkies, and think that by keeping narcotics away from them, even for pain treatment, they keep them from becoming junkies. Junkies themselves they don't know what to do with.
Gavin Newsom invokes the Law of Unintended Consequences? Keep an eye on the sky when you’re outdoors—pig turds are a bitch to clean off!