Repeal of County Ordinance, After Federal Court Injunction, Allows Harm Reduction Programs in Lewis County to Resume

Settlement Comes After Federal Court Blocked Ordinance Preventing Gather Church from Providing Health Services to Residents with Substance Use Disorder

Affiliate: ACLU of Washington
February 10, 2026 2:00 pm

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SEATTLE – Attorneys for Gather Church today announced that Lewis County has repealed a local ordinance that prevented the church, a ministry devoted to helping people with substance use disorder, from providing critical, lifesaving harm reduction services through its syringe services program.

The repeal is the result of a settlement agreement reached after the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington on Dec. 31 blocked enforcement of the ordinance, finding that the ordinance likely violates the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act, and state laws that permit and encourage harm reduction services. Gather Church is represented by American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Washington (ACLU-WA), and law firm Kaplan & Grady.

The settlement agreement reached by the parties includes a total repeal of the ordinance, which Lewis County has done today.

Now that the ordinance is repealed, Gather Church can resume its mobile syringe services program and distribute lifesaving supplies like test kits for fentanyl and xylazine, and the federal court case against Lewis County will be dismissed.

The settlement also includes $500,000 in attorney's fees.

“The harm reduction program at Gather Church is effective, and it saves lives. We are thrilled that our mobile clinic and distribution program can resume. Serving the community is a core part of Gather’s religious mission, and we won’t stop meeting people where they are,” said Cole Meckle, pastor at Gather Church.

Harm reduction services use non-judgmental strategies to minimize the negative health, social, and legal consequences associated with substance use. In 2019, Gather opened a mobile SSP that offered sterile syringes to people who would otherwise share unsterile syringes, along with other vital health services such as nursing assessments, mental health assessments, wound care, and connection to treatment and medical services, to name a few.

The program is supported by a grant from the Washington State Department of Health and built on decades of research showing that SSPs save lives, reduce the transmission of disease, facilitate access to drug rehabilitation, and do not increase drug use or local crime.

“The total repeal of this discriminatory ordinance is a victory not only for the recipients of harm reduction services, but for the community writ large. Harm reduction benefits everyone by reducing disease transmissions and overdoses, and it should be encouraged—not banned,” said Malhar Shah, staff attorney with the ACLU Disability Rights Program.

“Pastor Cole and Gather offer care and compassion to people who Lewis County would otherwise turn its back on. This settlement is a victory for harm reduction providers and others who insist on uplifting our shared humanity,” said Tara Urs, staff attorney with ACLU-WA.

“By halting Lewis County’s discriminatory ordinance, the court recognized the civil rights of faith-based and secular harm-reduction providers who deliver life-saving health care and dignity to people all too often marginalized by their communities ,” said David Howard Sinkman of Kaplan & Grady.

 

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