Chicago Sun-Times

Drug office targeted for major cut

Proposed 95% budget trim could damage efforts to fight opioid addiction epidemic

- Deirdre Shesgreen Contributi­ng: Maureen Groppe

In the midst of an opioid WASHINGTON addiction epidemic, the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g a plan that would gut the Office of National Drug Control Policy, a White House office that directs the country’s drug prevention efforts.

The president’s budget office is proposing to slash the drug agency’s budget by 95%, according to a letter the ONDCP’s acting director, Richard Baum, sent to employees.

In his letter, obtained by USA TODAY, Baum warned that the move would be “very discouragi­ng for our nation’s effort to address drug abuse.”

He said the budget plan would zero out two programs designed to combat drug traffickin­g and to fund local antidrug efforts.

Baum said he was working to reverse the proposed cuts.

“These drastic proposed cuts are frankly heartbreak­ing and, if carried out, would cause us to lose many good people who contribute greatly to ONDCP’s mission and core activities,” he wrote. “We hope to turn this around.”

The plan was first reported by Politico.

An internal White House document obtained by USA TODAY says the proposal would create a “smaller, more streamline­d” drug control office that could more effectivel­y direct drug- control policy.

“This change will allow ONDCP to focus on identifyin­g priorities and coordinati­ng interagenc­y efforts,” the White House document states.

The cuts would allow the administra­tion to “better address the top drug threats, including the opioid epidemic.”

That document also suggests that the two programs targeted for eliminatio­n— the High Intensity Drug Traffickin­g Areas ( HIDTA) program and the Drug Free Communitie­s program— are duplicativ­e.

HIDTA provides federal money to help local law enforcemen­t officials in areas most adversely affected by drug traffickin­g. It is very popular among members of Congress, some of whom have worked hard to get their local communitie­s designated as “high- intensity” and thus eligible for federal funds.

The White House document says the initiative has grown from about five regions receiving funds in 1988 to 28 now, at a cost of $ 250 million a year.

A White House spokeswoma­n, Sarah Sanders, downplayed the possible budget move.

“When it comes to the opioid epidemic, the president has been extremely clear. This is a top priority for him,” Sanders told reporters.

She noted that the budget is not complete.

“I certainly wouldn’t get ahead of conversati­ons about the budget,” she said. “The bigger point here is the president has been very clear that the opioid epidemic in this country is huge priority for him, something he is certainly very focused on tackling.”

Any move to kill the federal drug control office or slash its budget would likely be met with fierce resistance from members of Congress, who have the final say on such spending matters.

“I’ve known and worked with our drug czars for more than 20 years, and this agency is critical to our efforts to combat drug abuse in general and this opioid epidemic in particular,” Sen. Rob Portman, R- Ohio, said in a statement Friday.

He noted that the office oversees a program he helped create: the Drug Free Communitie­s Act, which he said has provided more than $ 1 billion to community drug coalitions around the country over the last 20 years.

“We have a heroin and prescripti­on drug crisis in this country and we should be supporting efforts to reverse this tide, not proposing drastic cuts to those who serve on the front lines of this epidemic,” Portman said.

 ??  ?? A rise in prescripti­on painkiller­s like OxyContin is partially to blame for the current opioid epidemic, which the White House acknowledg­es is a priority to combat.
A rise in prescripti­on painkiller­s like OxyContin is partially to blame for the current opioid epidemic, which the White House acknowledg­es is a priority to combat.

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