Here is some good news for addicts in Vermont: The state is among 13 others to pass a 911 Good Samaritan law, which protects the victim and witnesses to an overdose from being charged with certain drug related crimes. This encourages more people to call when they witness an overdose, since they don’t have to worry about being arrested if they are using drugs as well. According to The Fix:

Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin signed an important overdose prevention bill into law this morning, at a conference in South Burlington hosted by addiction specialist and sometime Fix interviewee Dr. Gabor MatéHouse bill 65 protects the victim and witnesses to a drug overdose from arrest and prosecution for certain crimes, including possession of drugs or paraphernalia and violation of restraining orders or probation. Last year, drug overdose claimed 73 lives in Vermont and remains the leading cause of injury death to state residents aged 25-64. The law aims to reduce deaths by removing the fear of criminal repercussions that prevents overdose witnesses from seeking help. The Governor also signed House bill 533, a comprehensive drug treatment and prevention bill designed to strengthen Vermont’s response to opioid and methamphetamine use. Both laws become effective immediately. “These bills are important because Vermonters care about those among us who are living with addiction,” says Tom Dalton, an advocate for the bill from Howard Center Safe Recovery in Burlington, “and their safety and well-being matter to us all.”

Vermont is the 13th US state to pass a 911 Good Samaritan law to combat an epidemic that claims more lives each year than car accidents and murder combined. New Mexico blazed the trail in 2007, before a swift succession of similar laws passed in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, Rhode Island, Washington, and the District of Columbia. This year, nearly a dozen more states introduced bills; legislation in North Carolina and New Jersey emerged victorious, while other bills were strangled by partisan bickering (Missouri, Mississippi and North Dakota), killed in committee (New Hampshire and West Virginia), or simply ran out of time (Hawaii and Texas). Maine still has a live bill, but it looks unlikely to pass this year.

Do you think the Good Samaritan Law will save lives?