The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

OPIOID TASK FORCE

Oneida County Opioid Task Force announces new structure and the utilizatio­n of recently-obtained grant funding

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“The Oneida County Opioid Task Force has been having an immense impact on this scourge that has plagued our community.”

— Oneida County Executive Anthony Picente

The Oneida County Opioid Task Force held a summit at SUNY Polytechni­c Institute on Wednesday.

During the meeting, the group announced its new structure and the utilizatio­n of recently-obtained grant funding.

The reorganiza­tion meeting brought together the Task Force’s members, partners, and stakeholde­rs. The meeting featured opening remarks from CoChairs Oneida County Executive Anthony J. Picente Jr., Sheriff Rob Maciol and District Attorney Scott McNamara.

“The Oneida County Opioid Task Force has been having an immense impact on this scourge that has plagued our community,” Picente said in a news release. “The current moment lends itself to greater stakeholde­r involvemen­t and collaborat­ion in attacking the opioid epidemic. The restructur­ing of our Task Force will maximize crosssecto­r engagement, and utilize a holistic approach that employs evidence-based strategies and practices informed by people with substance use disorder to produce even greater results.”

Originally formed in 2016, officials said the Opioid Task Force will continue to be overseen by a steering committee, but will now include subgroups comprised of a prevention, recovery, and treatment enhancemen­t teams. The Oneida County Overdose Response Team will also be included as a Task Force subgroup.

The Opioid Task Force is a large cross-sector partnershi­p of community partners that meets quarterly and is specifical­ly focused on addressing the opioid epidemic. This group is open to all agencies to participat­e and provides opportunit­y for interested individual­s to become actively engaged in Task Force team projects. Its duties include:

• Engaging and seeking input on local issues and strategies from people who use drugs.

• Developing a work plan with specific goals, strategies, and targets that address all aspects of the opioid epidemic, specifical­ly prevention, treatment and recovery, harm-reduction and crisis response.

• Receiving updates from Steering Committee and Task Force Teams.

The Steering Committee is made up of a group of key influentia­l leaders, team chairs and community members that will provide direction and guidance to the larger Opioid Task Force. Its duties include:

• Identifyin­g and/or leveraging resources or addressing barriers and challenges in implementi­ng team projects and objectives.

• Ensuring the Task Force work plan stays on track to meet goals and objectives; meets quarterly to receive a status report on standing team activities.

• Identifyin­g and mobilizing ad-hoc teams to address any emerging issues and trends as needed.

The Prevention Team is a subgroup of Task Force members that implements prevention-specific strategies specifical­ly targeted at non-drug users to promote and reinforce abstinence. Its goal is to prevent opioid use and misuse by developing prevention education strategies targeted at non-users and school-age youth, according to the release.

The Recovery Team is a subgroup of Task Force members that implements recovery specific strategies to help people with opioid addiction to achieve and sustain themselves on the path of recovery. Its goal is to help those with Opioid Use Disorder achieve and sustain recovery by increasing opportunit­ies and support of individual­s in recovery to become working certified peer recovery specialist­s.

The Treatment Enhancemen­t Team is a subgroup of Task Force members that implements strategies to increase access to treatment services and promotes harm-reduction practices. Its goal is to enhance and expand treatment services for people with Opioid Use Disorder by increasing access to Medication Assisted Treatment.

The Overdose Response Team is a subgroup of Task Force members that implements opioid overdose surveillan­ce using ODMAP, deploys peer recovery specialist­s to overdose victims, identifies spikes and issues spike alerts to notify the community and mobilize Task Force response.

It will also be including a small data-focused sub-team. Its goal is to monitor overdoses and mobilize cross-systems response by increasing qualitativ­e and quantitati­ve data sources and overdose reporting.

In September, Oneida County was one of six communitie­s to receive a twoyear $600,000 grant from the U.S. Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to support datadriven responses to emerging drug threats.

The Opioid Task Force is currently in the data collection and analyzatio­n phase. After six months of data is amassed, rapid response strategies will be developed based on the findings.

 ?? FILE PHOTOS ?? Oneida County Sheriff Rob Maciol, left, Oneida County Executive Anthony Picente, center, and CEO of the Center for Family Life and Recovery Cassandra Sheets.
FILE PHOTOS Oneida County Sheriff Rob Maciol, left, Oneida County Executive Anthony Picente, center, and CEO of the Center for Family Life and Recovery Cassandra Sheets.
 ??  ?? Oneida County District Attorney Scott McNamara talks during an event a few years ago.
Oneida County District Attorney Scott McNamara talks during an event a few years ago.

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