Familiarity With Drugs Helps a Group Speak for Users [View all]
SAN FRANCISCO With a couple of old desks, a beat-up couch and an off-white white board, the office space at 149 Turk Street, in this citys seedy Tenderloin district, is hardly remarkable. A collection of worn detective novels sits on the bookshelf, a couple of American flags hang limply from the wall and a coffee machine constantly percolates in the back kitchen.
It is the tenants who set 149 Turk apart: a ragtag group of current and former drug users who make no apologies about their fondness for illegal narcotics, intravenous experiences and the undeniable rush of getting high.
If you pass a drug test, joked Gary West, a member, youre outta here.
But the group, the San Francisco Drug Users Union, has more on its mind than simply turning on, tuning in and dropping out. The union is one of several groups in the United States and Canada that advocate for the rights of drug users, following the lead of older European drug user organizations. Their goals are often varied, but carry a common refrain: to represent the political interests and practical needs of chronic drug abusers, a sometimes grim agenda that includes everything from providing clean needles to finding safe places to nod out.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/12/us/drug-users-union-in-san-francisco-seeks-voice-in-policy.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20120312