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Stabbin' Wagon director steps down but says harm reduction group will continue services

The harm reduction organization Stabbin' Wagon distributes overdose medication in Medford, Oregon on January 27th, 2024.
Justin Higginbottom
/
JPR
The harm reduction organization Stabbin' Wagon distributes overdose medication in Medford, Oregon on January 27th, 2024.

The founder and executive director of harm reduction non-profit Stabbin' Wagon is leaving. But she said the controversial Southern Oregon group will continue to provide assistance to drug users.

Melissa Jones started Stabbin鈥 Wagon, a mobile service that provides things like clean needles and overdose medication to drug users, in 2020. The organization's goal is to reduce some risks of drug use like the spread of disease. In 2021, the group received nearly $600,000 dollars in state funding provided by Oregon鈥檚 Measure 110.

But Jones said that local pushback from those claiming her work enables drug use has taken a toll.

鈥淚t just became too much. It was really overwhelming,鈥 said Jones. 鈥淔or me personally, it was overwhelming. For me professionally, it was negatively impacting pretty much every aspect of my life.鈥

She said critics 鈥渄oxxed鈥 her, sharing her address on social media, which forced her to move. And that stress caused her to be hospitalized in April due to a mental health crisis.

She also claimed local police surveillance had negatively impacted her. Last August Jones was arrested for interfering with police while she hosted an HIV-testing event in Medford. A statement last year from the Medford Police Department denied any wrongdoing in their monitoring of her group鈥檚 activity.

Although she鈥檚 stepping down, she said Stabbin鈥 Wagon will continue its work and its funding will not be impacted.

鈥淚 love it so much,鈥 said Jones about working in harm reduction. 鈥滲ut I don't think that I'm going to be able to do that for a little while. I'm definitely going to need a pretty long break after everything that happened.鈥

Justin Higginbottom is a regional reporter for 老夫子传媒. He's worked in print and radio journalism in Utah as well as abroad with stints in Southeast Asia and the Middle East. He spent a year reporting on the Myanmar civil war and has contributed to NPR, CNBC and Deutsche Welle (Germany鈥檚 public media organization).