Porterville Recorder

In drug crisis hotbed, hoping for action on Trump’s words

- By DAN SEWELL

CINCINNATI — President Donald Trump heads to Ohio on Monday to make Cincinnati-area stops focusing on the new tax overhaul — though some in a state with one of the nation’s highest overdose rates would rather hear more about his plans for the drug crisis.

In Newtown, outside Cincinnati, Police Chief Tom Synan said he found Trump’s comments on opioids in his State of the Union address to be “much of the same. There are very convincing words and there’s yet to be very convincing actions.”

Synan, a law enforcemen­t representa­tive on the Cincinnati-based Hamilton County Heroin Coalition, wrote a column recently for The Cincinnati Enquirer calling for more urgency in the national response.

Trump’s declaratio­n of a public health emergency in October, he wrote, hasn’t been backed by more federal funding.

“We need that help to allow us to get to the next level,” Synan said in an interview. “There are so many more things that could be done, so many more people we could help.”

The White House didn’t respond to a request for comment. Trump on Tuesday night cited the deaths of 64,000 Americans from drug overdoses in 2016, a number expected to rise in 2017.

“It is terrible,” Trump said. “We have to do something about it.”

Trump said his administra­tion is committed to fighting the problem and getting more treatment for those needing it. Stepped-up border security will help fight the drug influx, he said, and the nation needs to get “much tougher” on drug dealers to stop what he called “this scourge.”

The Ohio president of the Fraternal Order of Police, Jay Mcdonald, attended the State of the Union as a guest of Republican U.S. Sen. Rob Portman.

“I think he hit the nail on the head about the scope of the problem,” said Mcdonald, of Marion in central Ohio. “I like the fact he said we need to be tough on trafficker­s and provide treatment to those addicted.”

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