Drafter
Clerk 04/26/2023
Title
AN ORDINANCE relating to the use of controlled substances in public places; adding a new chapter to K.C.C. Title 12, prescribing penalties, and establishing a contingent expiration date.
Body
STATEMENT OF FACTS:
1. In 2021, the Washington state Supreme Court ruled in Washington v. Blake that the state law that made possession of a controlled substance a felony was unconstitutional.
2. During the 2022 Legislative Session, the Washington state Legislature passed Engrossed Senate Bill 5476, which temporarily made possession of a controlled substance a misdemeanor.
3. The existing possession law expires on July 1, 2023, at which point there will be no statewide law concerning drug use or possession.
4. During the 2023 Legislative Session, the Legislature did not act to pass a cohesive criminal code for use and possession of controlled substances after the Washington v. Blake decision.
5. County and municipal governments have the authority to regulate drug use and possession in their respective jurisdictions.
6. Use of controlled substances can permanently alter a person's brain chemistry and have lifelong damaging effects on their health.
7. Almost two thousand five hundred people died of an overdose in Washington state in 2022, representing the fifth-highest annual increase in the United States.
8. According to public health - Seattle & King County, six hundred ninety overdose deaths from fentanyl occurred in King County in 2022, and one hundred sixty-seven people have already died from an overdose in King County in 2023.
9. From 2019 to 2022, the number of overdose deaths in King County has increased by one hundred thirty-seven percent, including an increase of twenty percent between 2019 and 2020 and an increase of thirty-nine percent between 2020 and 2021.
10. King County has taken steps to address substance use disorder through various diversion and alternative response programs including Law Enforcement Assisted Diver...
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