Vincent Orange, fighting Kwame Brown for Gray’s seat, went with a smaller Cadillac SUV than his competitor. What, he couldn’t afford an orange paint job?

Say what you will about the $515.7 billion spending bill the House of Representatives passed yesterday, there is a silver-lining for the District — the ban on the use of public funds for needle-exchange programs was finally lifted.

For the past nine years Congressional Republicans successfully prohibited the District from using any of its resources to promote needle-exchange programs, regardless of their efficacy in combating the spread of diseases such as HIV/AIDS. As a consequence, the only needle-exchange program of any significance was run by the organization PreventionWorks on a shoe-string budget of private contributions, serving only a third of the city’s estimated 9,700 intravenous drug users.

Though the ban was initially lifted earlier this year by the House, the Senate reinstated it during budget deliberations. It was finally removed during the debate over the omnibus spending bill passed yesterday, which allocates money to 14 Cabinet agencies. District officials have already announced plans to put $1 million towards needle-exchange programs in 2008.