The Columbus Dispatch

Christie-led panel recommends drug courts, other steps

- By Jessica Wehrman

WASHINGTON — A presidenti­al commission created to address the nation’s devastatin­g opioid crisis released a sweeping set of recommenda­tions Wednesday that included the creation of a nationwide system of drug courts, the developmen­t of non-addictive painkiller­s and a national campaign aimed at educating the public about the dangers of drug use.

The 56 recommenda­tions, contained in a 131-page report by the President’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis, included no

new funding to address the crisis. But Commission Chairman Chris Christie, the New Jersey governor, said that coming up with money to battle the crisis is Congress’ job, and the report included recommenda­tions of programs for Congress to fund.

President Donald Trump, Christie said, “cannot appropriat­e these funds by himself. The Constituti­on doesn’t permit it. They (members of Congress) must step up to appropriat­e the funds … to do what needs to be done.”

Among the more-sweeping recommenda­tions is that the Department of Justice broadly establish federal drug courts in all 93 federal judicial districts. They recommend that people with a substanceu­se disorder who violate probation by taking drugs be diverted into drug courts, not prisons.

Cheri Walter, CEO of the Ohio Associatio­n of County Behavioral Health Authoritie­s, said she supports the idea of drug courts — as long as they’re funded.

“What I don’t want to see is them divert treatment money to drug courts,” she said. “If you have a drug court, you have to have some funding to pay for it.”

She said drug courts have worked well in Ohio.

“I know people whose main issue is addiction,” she said. “If they get the treatment, they’re better served, as is the community.”

Since Trump named the crisis a public health emergency last week, Walter already has seen one positive developmen­t: Wednesday, she got a letter from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services announcing that it is loosening restrictio­ns that limited Medicaidfu­nded drug treatment to centers with 16 or fewer beds.

The commission also recommende­d the expanded availabili­ty of medication- assisted therapies; making the opioid- overdose antidote naloxone more available to first responders; beefing up penalties for those who traffic fentanyl and other synthetic opioids; and creating additional research initiative­s for vulnerable population­s such as pregnant women and babies born addicted.

Christie said the crisis claims an average of 175 lives a day in the U. S.

“If a terrorist organizati­on was killing 175 Americans a day on American soil, what would you be willing to pay to make it stop?” he asked. “I think we’d be willing to do anything and everything to make it stop. And that’s the way we now need to see this because this is an attack from within. We are killing ourselves.”

The recommenda­tions include the endorsemen­t of the STOP Act, a bill pushed by Ohio Sen. Rob Portman in the Senate and Ohio Rep. Pat Tiberi in the House that would require Postal Service shipments from foreign countries to include electronic advance data in the hopes of preventing fentanyl and carfentani­l from coming to America through the mail. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, has co-sponsored the bill in the Senate, and most of the Ohio delegation is co- sponsoring the House bill.

The recommenda­tions also include support for a Portman measure that would require the use of prescripti­on- drug monitoring programs in all states that receive certain federal dollars to fight the opioid epidemic. Portman called for the Senate to pass both bills quickly and said he is “hopeful that Congress will act with urgency in the coming weeks and months to review and address” the measures.

And the suggestion­s include components of Brown’s legislatio­n to provide Customs and Border Patrol agents with screening devices to detect fentanyl at the borders before it can reach Ohio communitie­s. Portman has cosponsore­d that bill.

“Anything we can do to stop fentanyl at our borders will help keep it from reaching the Ohio communitie­s where it is taking lives,” said Brown. “Better equipping these agents with detection devices is a commonsens­e step we can take right now to stem the flow of these drugs.”

Brown, however cautioned that the report “cannot be the end of the administra­tion’s attention to this issue.”

“I urge President Trump to use the declaratio­n he made last week to put real money into this public health crisis,” he said.

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