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SUD Treatment & Harm Reduction

I will ensure that substance use treatment is affordable and accessible, and ensure access to harm reduction, removing barriers to proven lifesaving care.

Substance use disorders should be treated as a public health issue, not a moral failing. For too long, New York has responded to addiction with stigma and criminalization instead of care and prevention based services.

The current approach has failed.

I believe substance use treatment and harm reduction must be core parts of our healthcare system. If we want safer neighborhoods, fewer overdose deaths, less strain on our hospitals, and fewer people in crisis, then we need to build a system that helps people stay alive, access treatment, and recover with dignity.

Make Addiction Treatment a Guaranteed Part of Healthcare
Treatment for substance use and alcohol misuse is healthcare. I will fight for universal healthcare that fully includes substance use treatment, including outpatient care, inpatient care, medication supported recovery, detox, recovery support, and long-term follow-up services. No one should be denied care because they are uninsured, underinsured, or too poor to pay.

Treat Harm Reduction as Public Health
Harm reduction saves lives. It keeps people alive long enough to access treatment, reduces overdose deaths, lowers the spread of infectious disease, and creates trusted pathways into care. I will support community-based harm reduction programs, overdose prevention tools, outreach teams, and evidence-based strategies that reduce death instead of making people hide in more dangerous conditions.

Create Pathways from the Street to Stability
People do not recover in a vacuum. Treatment works better when it is connected to housing, case management, mental health care, and community support. I will fight for supportive housing models that include addiction treatment and recovery based services, so New Yorkers are not trapped in a revolving door between homelessness, hospitalization, and incarceration.

Expand Access to Treatment Not Jail
We cannot continue to criminalize living with the disease of addiction. Criminalization has not solved the overdose crisis or open-air drug use. It has only pushed people further away from care and built distrust within the system. I support a public health approach that prioritizes treatment, harm reduction, supportive housing, and recovery services over failed enforcement-only strategies.

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