Chattanooga Times Free Press

Oregon’s drug decriminal­ization sees mixed results

- ANDREW SELSKY AP writer Barry Hatton in Lisbon, Portugal, contribute­d to this story.

SALEM, Ore. — Oregon voters approved a ballot measure in 2020 to decriminal­ize hard drugs after being told it was a way to establish and fund addiction recovery centers that would offer people aid instead of incarcerat­ion.

Yet in the first year after the new approach took effect in February 2021, only 1% of people who received citations for possessing controlled substances asked for help via a new hotline.

With Oregon being the first state in America to decriminal­ize possession of personal-use amounts of heroin, methamphet­amine, LSD, oxycodone and other drugs, its program is being watched as a potential model for other states.

Some are questionin­g whether the approach is proving too lenient, but others say the new system has already had a positive impact by redirectin­g millions of dollars into facilities to help those with drug dependency issues. The funds come from taxes generated by Oregon’s legal marijuana industry and savings from reductions in arrests, jail time and probation supervisio­n.

Under Ballot Measure 110, possession of controlled sub- stances is now a newly creat- ed Class E “violation” instead of a felony or misdemeano­r. It carries a maximum $100 fine, which can be waived if the person calls a hotline for a health assessment. The call can lead to addiction counseling and other services.

But out of roughly 2,000 citations issued by police in the year after decriminal­ization took effect, only 92 of the people who received them called the hotline by mid-February. And only 19 requested resources for services, said William Nunemann of Lines for Life, which runs the hotline.

Almost half of those who got citations failed to show up in court.

State health officials have reported 473 unintentio­nal opioid overdose deaths from January to August 2021, the most recent month for which statistics are available, with the vast majority of those occurring after decriminal­ization took effect. That narrowly surpasses the total for all of 2020, and is nearly 200 deaths more than the state saw in all of 2019. The state reports that opioid overdose visits to emergency rooms and urgent care centers have also been on the rise.

The Oregon Health Authority cites as possible reasons the greater presence of fentanyl, which has increased overdose deaths across the country, as well as a downturn in reporting during the pandemic in 2020.

State Sen. Floyd Prozanski, chair of the Oregon Senate’s Judiciary and Ballot Measure 110 Implementa­tion Committee, said he’s surprised more of those ticketed weren’t taking advantage of the recovery options. Still, he believes it’s too early to judge how the new approach is going.

“It’s a different model, at least for the U.S.,” Prozanski said, adding he’d want to wait at least another half-year before considerin­g whether steps should be introduced to compel people to seek treatment.

Decriminal­ization advocates argued putting drug users in jail and giving them criminal records, which harms job and housing prospects, was not working.

“Punishing people and these punitive actions, all it does is saddle them with barriers and more stigma and more shame,” said Tera Hurst, executive director of Oregon Health Justice Recovery Alliance, which represents more than 75 community-based organizati­ons and is focused on implementi­ng Measure 110.

The Drug Policy Alliance spearheade­d Oregon’s ballot measure. With no U.S. states to serve as examples, the New York-based group, which calls itself the leading organizati­on in the U.S. promoting alternativ­es to the war on drugs, studied Portugal, which decriminal­ized drug possession in 2000.

Portugal’s approach is more vigorous than Oregon’s in getting people to treatment.

There, “dissuasion commission­s” pressure anyone caught using drugs — even

marijuana — to seek treatment. Those pressure points include fines, prohibitin­g drug users from visiting certain venues or from traveling abroad, seizure of personal property, community work and having to periodical­ly report to health services or other places.

Drug Policy Alliance intentiona­lly sought an approach that did not compel

people to seek treatment, said spokesman Matt Sutton.

“We have seen that when people voluntaril­y access services when they are ready, they have much more successful outcomes,” Sutton said.

Some 16,000 people accessed services through the ballot measure’s “Access to Care” grants in the first year of decriminal­ization, according

to the Oregon Health Authority.

Most — 60% — accessed “harm reduction services,” like syringe exchanges and overdose medication­s, the health authority said. Another 15% were assisted with housing needs and 12% obtained peer support. Only 0.85% entered treatment.

Critics say that’s simply not enough.

“The Oregon ballot initiative was presented to the public as pro-treatment, but it has been a complete failure in that regard,” said Keith Humphreys, an addiction researcher and professor of psychiatry at Stanford University and former senior adviser in the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.

Brian Pacheco of the Drug Policy Alliance, though, said people with drug problems need a range of options, including harm reduction services, housing assistance, peer support and, for those who can’t get insurance or Medicaid, access to treatment centers.

“Measure 110 funding has strengthen­ed organizati­ons in myriad ways, including getting mobile vehicles to provide services in communitie­s, helped programs keep their doors open, and aided other organizati­ons to purchase and distribute Naloxone (which reverses opioid overdose),” Pacheco said in an email.

The $31 million in grants distribute­d so far paid for thousands of doses of naloxone, thousands of syringe exchanges, recovery housing, vehicles and the hiring of dozens of staffers for care centers, including recovery mentors, according to the health authority.

An example of where some of the money is going is Great Circle, a nonresiden­tial treatment center in Salem owned by the Confederat­ed Tribes of Grand Ronde, which was awarded a $590,055 grant.

On a recent day, two Salem police officers checked on a homeless woman who had been assaulted days earlier. Still bearing a black eye, she confided she had a drug problem and needed help. Police Lt. Treven Upkes called Great Circle to see if they could help. Bring her right over, he was told.

“Just the fact that they had an open door for us at the moment that someone was saying they were ready for help, that’s such an incredible step for us,” Upkes said. “That’s the kind of thing that we would hope comes out of Measure 110.”

If the response had been to schedule an appointmen­t two weeks down the road, Upkes noted he might have been unable to reconnect with the woman.

At Great Circle, a staff doctor and nurses check a person’s vital signs and do a urinalysis with an in-house lab. A nurse dispenses doses of methadone, which can relieve terrible “dope sick” symptoms a person in opioid withdrawal experience­s.

Peer specialist­s like Nick Mull describe their own life experience­s to those with substance abuse disorders and inspire them. Mull’s parents were addicts, and he fell into drug use himself at a young age.

“About six years ago, I got in some trouble and … I started to want to change my life,” said Mull, wearing a black hoodie and jeans. “So I just started doing treatment, more treatment and more treatment. I learned a lot.”

Jennifer Worth, Great Circle’s operations director, said Mull plays an important role.

“What Nick brings to the work is a sense of hope,” Worth said. “And the patients who are struggling with where he was can see that hope is possible.”

But with so few people seeking help after receiving citations, the Legislatur­e might need to consider requiring they do more than call a hotline or pay a small fine, Prozanski said.

Humphreys believes people should be pressured to seek treatment if they’re

committing crimes like shopliftin­g and burglary, but not if they’re simply using drugs.

“It’s about the threats to public safety that some people pose because of their

problemati­c drug use,” Humphreys said. “And in those cases, pressuring people to seek treatment is absolutely legitimate.”

Oregon Secretary of State Shemia Fagan’s office will be auditing Oregon’s program. Fagan said she has a personal interest: Her own mother had a lifelong battle with addiction and homelessne­ss.

 ?? ?? Nick Mull, a peer specialist at Great Circle drug treatment center in Salem helps those recovering from addiction by describing his own life experience­s and recovery. Mull was addicted to heroin and used other drugs from an early age but got clean six years ago.
Nick Mull, a peer specialist at Great Circle drug treatment center in Salem helps those recovering from addiction by describing his own life experience­s and recovery. Mull was addicted to heroin and used other drugs from an early age but got clean six years ago.
 ?? ?? Vanessa Caudel, a nurse, sits Feb. 24 at her work station in at Great Circle where she provides doses of methadone, which can relieve the “dope sick” symptoms a person in opioid withdrawal experience­s.
Vanessa Caudel, a nurse, sits Feb. 24 at her work station in at Great Circle where she provides doses of methadone, which can relieve the “dope sick” symptoms a person in opioid withdrawal experience­s.
 ?? ?? Jennifer Worth, operations director of Great Circle drug treatment center, speaks Feb. 24 during an interview at the facility in Salem.
Jennifer Worth, operations director of Great Circle drug treatment center, speaks Feb. 24 during an interview at the facility in Salem.
 ?? ?? Signs at the Great Circle drug treatment center show where receptacle­s used to dispense methadone should be disposed of after use.
Signs at the Great Circle drug treatment center show where receptacle­s used to dispense methadone should be disposed of after use.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Andrew Selsky) ?? A woman enters the Great Circle drug treatment center March 8 in Salem, Ore.
(File Photo/AP/Andrew Selsky) A woman enters the Great Circle drug treatment center March 8 in Salem, Ore.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States