San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

ELECTION OFFICIALS STOCK UP ON NALOXONE

Move comes after fentanyl-laced mail disrupts vote counts

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The suspicious letters sent to vote centers and government buildings in six states this month were undeniably scary, some containing traces of fentanyl or white powder, accompanie­d by not-so-veiled threats and dubious political symbols.

Harkening back to the anthrax attacks that killed five people in 2001, the mailings are prompting elections officials already frustrated with ongoing harassment and threats to reach out to local police, fire and health department­s for help stocking up on the overdose reversal medication naloxone.

Even if there’s little risk from incidental contact with the synthetic opioid, having the antidote on hand isn’t a bad idea amid an addiction epidemic that is killing more than 100,000 people in the U.S. every year — and it can provide some assurance for stressed ballot workers, election managers say.

“My team is usually in the direct fire just because we’re

A package of Narcan is pictured at a first aid station at the King County Elections office in Washington.

opening up thousands or millions of ballots, depending on the election,” said Eldon Miller, who leads the ballot-opening staff at King County Elections in Seattle, which stocked up on naloxone after receiving a fentanyl-laced letter in August. “I always say to my team, ‘Your safety is my utmost importance.’”

The letters were sent this month to vote centers or government buildings in six states: Georgia, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington and Kansas. Some were intercepte­d before they arrived, but others were delivered,

prompting evacuation­s and briefly delaying vote counts in local elections. The FBI and U.S. Postal Inspection Service are investigat­ing.

Fentanyl, an opioid that can be 50 times as powerful as the same amount of heroin, is driving an overdose crisis as it is pressed into pills or mixed into other drugs.

Briefly touching it cannot cause an overdose, and researcher­s have found the risk of fatal overdose from accidental exposure is low, unlike with powdered anthrax that can float in the air and cause deadly infections when inhaled.

“I hope we encourage people to not hurt election officials,” said Anne Dover, the elections director in suburban Atlanta’s Cherokee County, which did not receive a suspicious letter. “A lot of people are leaving the field. It’s not just threats of physical harm. There’s a lot of emotional and psychologi­cal abuse.”

The office of Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said last week that it will provide naloxone to any of the state’s 159 counties after a letter intercepte­d on its way to elections officials in Atlanta’s Fulton County tested positive for opioids.

Some of the letters, including ones sent to King and Pierce counties in Washington state, bore striking similariti­es to the one King County received while counting votes in this year’s August primary. The incident prompted King County Elections to procure naloxone.

“We felt like it was just a good idea to have on hand for all kinds of scenarios these days,” King County Elections spokespers­on Halei Watkins said. “We have it in a few spots in the building, and include it with the first aid and emergency kits that go to our offsite vote centers.”

 ?? LINDSEY WASSON AP ??
LINDSEY WASSON AP

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