Las Vegas Review-Journal

TRUMP’S DRUG COMMISSION STRUGGLES FOR SOLUTIONS

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realities of limited government resources, slow-moving agencies and the competing agendas of Cabinet members, even as they try to push in the same general direction. The hurricanes that have struck Texas and Florida, and the costly recovery that will follow, appear to have complicate­d the process.

Christie, in a statement issued to the New York Times, said that the White House Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis was “continuing its work” and was eager to “begin to push back on this scourge, which is killing so many Americans unnecessar­ily.”

Patrick J. Kennedy, the former Democratic congressma­n from Rhode Island, who also serves on the panel, said that Trump and Price “both know this is going to mark their time in office.”

During the primary campaign last year, Trump surged to victory in New Hampshire in part on his promise to focus on the opioid crisis, which has claimed tens of thousands of lives and shown little sign of abating. The issue was championed most forcefully in that primary by Christie, who has spoken about the need for benevolenc­e in treating addiction as a disease rather than as a crime.

A Times study of reports of drug deaths in 2016 found that there were most likely more than 59,000, the highest on record.

In an interim report issued on July 31, Christie’s panel recommende­d a declaratio­n of a national emergency. In a statement that caught most of his advisers by surprise, and that contradict­ed what Price had said days earlier, Trump told reporters on Aug. 10 that he was moving forward.

“The opioid crisis is an emergency. And I’m saying officially right now, it is an emergency. It’s a national emergency,” he said at the time. “We’re going to spend a lot of time, a lot of effort and a lot of money on the opioid crisis.”

His statements have left advisers scrambling to fulfill his pledge, creating a long lag between a presidenti­al statement and an actual action to follow it.

A White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberati­ons, said the administra­tion was reviewing options and putting the report through an expedited legal process.

Christie and other members of the panel are aware that the chances of pushing a funding bill through a log-jammed Congress are slim.

A law known as the Stafford Act is the option that would be likely to free up the most money. But it would be allocated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which traditiona­lly focuses on recovery after physical disasters, such as the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, or the recent hurricanes.

The report calls the roughly 142 Americans who die from opioid overdoses every day “a death toll equal to Sept. 11 every three weeks.” Among its recommenda­tions is a law shielding people who report overdoses, an expansion of Medicaid-funded drug treatment, and a requiremen­t that police officers carry naloxone, which counteract­s the effects of an overdose.

Administra­tion officials said that Cabinet officials were seriously considerin­g the possibilit­y of making naloxone widely available. But other recommenda­tions in the report appear less certain to be acted on swiftly.

When Christie presented the report to Trump’s advisers roughly six weeks ago, he was greeted with some skepticism over the Stafford Act recommenda­tion, according to two people briefed on the discussion. Among them was Thomas P. Bossert, the president’s Homeland Security adviser, who took issue with the prospect that resources could be moved away from responding to a natural disaster, according to the two people briefed.

Christie left it in the report, and the president made the declaratio­n — but without a clear directive. Trump is said to be aware that there are not enough treatment options available, that opioids are being overprescr­ibed by doctors and that there needs to be a greater effort toward deterring people from using drugs in the first place.

One administra­tion official, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said the Stafford Act option was extremely unlikely, especially as hurricanes have slammed into the coasts of Texas and Florida in the last few weeks.

Kellyanne Conway, the White House counselor, who has become the point person within the West Wing on the issue, has repeatedly traveled the country with Price to address the issue.

“No state has been spared, and no demographi­c group is untouched,” she said. “We hope politician­s of all persuasion­s and leaders across many industries will join us in educating and engaging a public grappling with rampant addiction and a rise in deaths.”

But beyond Conway, it is not clear who among the senior administra­tion officials is pushing Trump to make good on his statement.

John F. Kelly, the president’s second chief of staff, has come to the table late in the process, but he is said to be interested in a swift solution.

The Office of American Innovation, led by Trump’s son-inlaw, Jared Kushner, helped establish the commission, but is not expected to play a strong role, two White House officials said. The director of the Office of Management and Budget, Mick Mulvaney, has been concerned about the potential cost.

And the message of benevolenc­e toward drug users has been at odds with the tone set by the president’s attorney general, Jeff Sessions, who has been pushing more aggressive, war-on-drugsstyle tactics in cities. Trump himself has been prone to such language, creating a whipsaw effect.

“It’s going to require, obviously, a state of emergency” to deal with opioids, said Kennedy, himself a recovering addict. “And it’s going to require however many dollars are necessary to meet the demand, however we ultimately assess that demand.”

 ?? AP PHOTO / EVAN VUCCI ?? President Donald Trump speaks Aug. 8 during a briefing on the opioid crisis at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J. From left are White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, Trump, first lady Melania Trump and National Drug Control Policy acting director Richard Baum.
AP PHOTO / EVAN VUCCI President Donald Trump speaks Aug. 8 during a briefing on the opioid crisis at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J. From left are White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, Trump, first lady Melania Trump and National Drug Control Policy acting director Richard Baum.

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