The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Cordray says he would declare emergency

- By Julie Carr Smyth

Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Richard Cordray faulted Republican­s for doing too little to fight the crisis.

COLUMBUS » Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Richard Cordray on Monday faulted Republican­s for doing too little to fight the opioid crisis and said he would immediatel­y declare a state emergency and begin to better fund social services programs to address the problem at its roots.

“Mike DeWine and Republican­s in Columbus have been asleep at the switch while the opioid epidemic has spread across Ohio, tearing apart families and leaving devastatio­n in its wake,” Cordray said in announcing his plan to address the issue. “As governor, I’ll bring urgency and badly-needed resources to this fight, and will partner closely with local leaders to stop this plague from causing even more damage to our state.”

Cordray, a former federal consumer watchdog and state attorney general, is in a crowded primary for the Democratic gubernator­ial nomination. DeWine, the current state attorney general, is Republican­s’ endorsed contender for the GOP bid.

Both are seeking this year to replace Republican Gov. John Kasich, who is term-limited.

Kasich and legislativ­e Republican­s have supported an array of programs to fight the crisis. The state Legislatur­e infused new money into the most recent state budget, despite a projected shortfall, providing funding for community coalitions, traditiona­l housing, a nursing home pilot project, drug labs and drug courts and short-term job certificat­ion programs for in-demand jobs.

Cordray said Ohio cannot “arrest our way out” of the problem, but must get at the epidemic’s root causes. The crisis involving prescripti­on painkiller­s and heroin is killing 14 Ohioans a day. Cordray’s plan would put more money into things like treatment, addiction and education and add programs to address economic despair, he said.

His plan calls for immediatel­y declaring a state of emergency, protecting Medicaid expansion funding, supporting additional training for law enforcemen­t and first responders, improving local access to treatment and prevention, boosting state support for families and increasing foster and adoptive services.

Ryan Stubenrauc­h, DeWine’s campaign spokesman, pushed back against Cordray’s assertions that Republican­s — and DeWine, specifical­ly — had done too little.

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