Antelope Valley Press

Fentanyl’s scourge plainly visible on streets of LA

- By JAE HONG and BRIAN MELLEY Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — In a filthy alley behind a Los Angeles doughnut shop, Ryan Smith convulsed in the grips of a fentanyl high — lurching from moments of slumber to bouts of violent shivering on a warm summer day.

When Brandice Josey, another homeless addict, bent down and blew a puff of fentanyl smoke his way in an act of charity, Smith sat up and slowly opened his lip to inhale the vapor as if it was the cure to his problems.

Smith, wearing a grimy yellow T-shirt that said “Good Vibes Only,” reclined on his backpack and dozed, the rest of the afternoon, on the asphalt, unperturbe­d by the stench of rotting food and human waste that permeated the air.

For too many people strung out on the drug, the sleep that follows a fentanyl hit is permanent. The highly addictive and potentiall­y lethal drug has become a scourge across America and is taking a toll on the growing number of people living on the streets of Los Angeles.

Nearly 2,000 homeless people died in the city, from April 2020 to March 2021, a 56% increase from the previous year, according to a report released by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health. Overdose was the leading cause of death, killing more than 700.

Fentanyl was developed to treat intense pain from ailments like cancer. Use of fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid that is cheap to produce and is often sold as is or laced in other drugs, has exploded. Because it’s 50 times more potent than heroin, even a small dose can be fatal.

It has quickly become the deadliest drug in the nation, according to the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion. Two-thirds of the 107,000 overdose deaths, in 2021, were attributed to synthetic opioids like fentanyl, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

The drug’s toll spreads far beyond the streets.

Jennifer Catano, 27, has the names of two children tattooed on her wrists, but she hasn’t seen them for several years. They live with her mother.

“My mom doesn’t think it’s a good idea because she thinks it’s gonna hurt the kids because I’m not ready to get rehabilita­ted,” Catano said.

She has overdosed three times and been through rehab seven or eight times.

“It’s scary to get off of it,” she said. “The withdrawal­s are really bad.”

Catano wandered around a subway station near MacArthur Park desperate to sell a bottle of Downy fabric softener and a Coleman camping chair she stole from a nearby store.

Drug abuse can be a cause or symptom of homelessne­ss. Both can also intersect with mental illness.

A 2019 report by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority found about a quarter of all homeless adults in Los Angeles County had mental illnesses and 14% had a substance use disorder. That analysis only counted people who had a permanent or long-term severe condition. Taking a broader interpreta­tion of the same data, the Los Angeles Times found about 51% had mental illnesses and 46% had substance use disorders.

Billions of dollars are being spent to alleviate homelessne­ss in California but treatment is not always funded.

A controvers­ial bill signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom could improve that by forcing people suffering from severe mental illness into treatment. But they need to be diagnosed with a certain disorder such as schizophre­nia and addiction alone doesn’t qualify.

Help is available but it is outpaced by the magnitude of misery on the streets.

Rita Richardson, a field supervisor with LA Door, a city addiction-prevention program that works with people convicted of misdemeano­rs, hands out socks, water, condoms, snacks, clean needles and flyers at the same hotspots, Monday through Friday. She hopes the consistenc­y of her visits will encourage people to get help.

“Then hopefully the light bulb comes on. It might not happen, this year. It might not happen, next year. It might take several years,” said Richardson, a former homeless addict. “My goal is to take them from the dark to the light.”

Parts of Los Angeles have become scenes of desperatio­n with men and women sprawled on sidewalks, curled up on benches and collapsed in squalid alleys. Some huddle up smoking the drug, others inject it.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Forensic assistant Laurentiu Bigu (left) and investigat­or Ryan Parraz from the Los Angeles County coroner’s office cover the body of a homeless man found dead on a Los Angeles sidewalk, in April. The 60-year-old man died from the effects of methamphet­amine, according to his autopsy report.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Forensic assistant Laurentiu Bigu (left) and investigat­or Ryan Parraz from the Los Angeles County coroner’s office cover the body of a homeless man found dead on a Los Angeles sidewalk, in April. The 60-year-old man died from the effects of methamphet­amine, according to his autopsy report.

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