Boulder's main library closed due to high levels of methamphetamine

BY CONOR MCCUE
UPDATED ON: DECEMBER 20, 2022 / 5:21 PM / CBS COLORADO



The city of Boulder closed its main library at 1001 Arapahoe Avenue on Monday afternoon for environmental testing after methamphetamine use was discovered in the facility's restrooms.

The testing will include swab samples of surfaces inside and outside of the restrooms.

"The question right now is whether these levels, which we're concerned about, are confined to the exhaust vents in the restrooms, or whether the residue has also developed or been deposited on parts of the library that people have more access to," said Sarah Huntley, spokesperson for the city of Boulder. "The biggest concern for methamphetamine contamination in short bursts like that... is if it's on the surfaces."

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CBS

According to the city, the decision to close the library was made after air duct testing on six restrooms showed residue inside the ducts that had higher-than-acceptable levels of methamphetamine.

Those ducts blow air and contaminants outside the building. It is unclear if any of those contaminants showed up on surfaces.

This comes after a recent spike in reports of individuals smoking in public restrooms over the past four weeks.

On two occasions, city employees were evaluated and cleared of ongoing health concerns after "experiencing symptoms consistent with a potential exposure to meth residue or fumes."

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CBS

"This is truly a sad situation and represents the impact of a widespread epidemic in our country," said Library Director David Farnan in a statement. "The city is consulting with Boulder County Public Health officials and will take all steps necessary to prioritize safety. We are committed to transparency and appropriate remediation."

The Meadows, George Reynolds, and NoBo Corner Library will remain open during the closure of the main library. Those employees at the main library will be reassigned to other city facilities or branch locations.

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CBS

There is no set timeline right now, but the results of the testing will guide the city's remediation plan for the library, as well as the level of restroom service offered to patrons moving forward. The latter is a much more complicated decision since the warmth and restrooms inside the public building can be crucial resources for people experiencing homelessness.

"We want to obviously provide people with opportunities to deal with their biological needs with privacy and dignity and easy access, but we also have to strike a balance for folks who might choose to use those same spaces for illegal activities," Huntley said.

The city of Boulder also released this information: Symptoms of exposure to low levels of methamphetamine contamination can include headache, nausea, dizziness, and fatigue. Individuals who have visited the library recently and are experiencing any of these symptoms should consult their healthcare practitioner.

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Why dont they declare open season on methheads? dont they know that all methheads are nazis and meth is their holy drug?
 
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The next step is to turn the old library into a shooting gallery. Have a grand opening with free meth, then bolt the doors shut and gas the place. Sure there'd be a few bleeding heart faggots calling it state-sanctioned murder, but to the rest of us it's just taking out the trash. Close the shooting gallery up and then reopen it again in a month or two's time with another free meth day. Rinse and repeat until all the meth heads in Boulder are dead or have fucked off elsewhere.
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I think the black community may have heard that one before...
 
When people make the argument "Libraries are public spaces for everyone" I know they mean well, but in reality it always ends with them choosing the drug addicts over the other people and I'm sick of it.
When I saw growing up, the library was where the kids who couldn't go home could go (e.g. Latchkey kids who couldn't go home, older kids who needed a place to hang out that wasn't under a bridge, etc). I'm absolutely certain those places saved a number of those kids, and now what? Where do they go now?
 
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