Fort Greene Park officials are warning visitors to watch out for tiny plastic canisters on fields and playgrounds, fearing they may contain traces of the deadly drug fentanyl.
The so-called trash can containers are colorful and the size of a coin, according to an email alert from the Fort Greene Park Conservancy Monday, and they could be mistaken for treats or toys to young kids and dogs.
โWe want all park users to know that weโve had several reports of potential fentanyl โtrash cansโ located in and around the park,โ the email said. โThese have been found in the parkโs playgrounds, on the central lawn, and on the Willoughby entrance ramp.โ
Itโs unclear if the tiny cans found in the park actually contained fentanyl. David Barker, the city Parks Department director for Fort Greene Park, said the containers discovered in the area were โpotentialโ drug paraphernalia and have not yet tested positive for traces of any drugs.
Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid thatโs commonly mixed into other drugs, is 30 to 50 times more potent than heroin, according to the city Health Department.
Last month, a 1-year-old boy died and several other kids were sickened after being exposed to fentanyl at a Bronx daycare, where a kilogram of fentanyl and drug processing equipment was found near the childrenโs play mats and under the floorboards.
Still, medical experts told NPR earlier this year fentanyl does not easily pass through the skin โ and most people harmed by the drug consume it by smoking or injection.
Some schools around Fort Greene have also been on high alert for the drug containers as well, issuing notices to parents to warn them of the potential dangers.
โThese trash cans are often bright colored and could be very appealing for children to pick up as a trinket or toy. Kids need to be told not to touch them, that they are dangerous and can make them sick,โ said one email from Community Roots Charter School in Fort Greene that was sent to parents Monday.
On…
Read the full article here
Leave a Reply