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As Pacific Northwest fentanyl crisis surges, officials grapple with how to curb it

Dec 13, 2023, 1:25 PM | Updated: 5:35 pm

A person holds drug paraphernalia near the Washington Center building on SW Washington St. in downt...

A person holds drug paraphernalia near the Washington Center building on SW Washington St. in downtown Portland, Ore. on Tuesday, April 4, 2023. Three years ago, nearly two-thirds of Oregon voters approved a ballot measure decriminalizing illicit drugs, backing the idea that addiction treatment is more effective than jail. But now, public drug use in cities such as Portland and a surge in fentanyl overdose deaths have created a backlash against the first-in-the-nation law. (Dave Killen/The Oregonian via AP)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS

(Dave Killen/The Oregonian via AP)

The fight against fentanyl is increasingly being waged in schools, jails and on city streets in the Pacific Northwest, where state officials in Oregon and Washington have named it a top issue as overdose deaths rise.

Washington鈥檚 Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee plans to ask lawmakers for $50 million more to treat and prevent opioid use. In Oregon, Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek has proposed declaring a fentanyl emergency in Portland, and lawmakers have created a committee on addiction to get a jump on the issue before the Legislature reconvenes in February.

Revisit 成人X站’s Facing Fentanyl series: Hear the voices of people hurting

鈥淲e know how serious this problem is. Fentanyl is deadly,鈥 Inslee said. 鈥淏ut there is a positive note 鈥 we can be successful if we put our minds to this. Treatment works. We can help people recover.鈥

A surge in fentanyl deaths, including聽, has marked the latest iteration of the years-long opioid crisis. The most recent provisional figures from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that more than 78,000 people died from overdoses involving synthetic opioids in the 12 months ending June 2023, accounting for 92% of all opioid overdose deaths during that period.

One way Oregon and Washington want to reduce fatalities is by more widely distributing opioid overdose reversal medications such as naloxone. Naloxone is most commonly administered as a nasal spray or an injection and helps restore breathing.

Inslee鈥檚 office said part of his proposed supplemental budget would go toward equipping first responders with naloxone, and Oregon鈥檚 state health department said it plans to offer free opioid overdose reversal kits to middle and high schools. A bill that has been filed ahead of Washington鈥檚 short legislative session, which starts in January, would require all school districts to make such medication available in its high schools. Current law only requires districts with at least 2,000 students to do so.

Another key goal is expanding access to treatment, including in jails. The majority of inmates meet the criteria for drug dependence or abuse, studies have found, and they are more likely to die in their first weeks after release. Overdose is a leading cause of death for people newly released, partly because their tolerance decreases when they鈥檙e not using behind bars.

The federal government is planning to allow states to use money from Medicaid, the joint federal-state health insurance program for low-income people,聽 in state jails and prisons. The plan represents a major shift for the program; when launched in 1965, it banned using the funds to help incarcerated people.

Inslee wants to use state money to pay for such prisoner medications until federal Medicaid dollars become available. His state鈥檚聽聽also seeks to expand treatment by allowing jails to start administering medication that reduces cravings and withdrawal symptoms to people who weren鈥檛 taking it before incarceration. Only 19% of U.S. jails initiate such treatment for people without prior prescriptions,聽聽in analyzing data from 2019.

According to the same report, only 24% of jails continue to provide medication to curb withdrawal symptoms and opioid cravings to people who had prescriptions before incarceration.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved three drugs for treating opioid dependence: buprenorphine, methadone and naltrexone.

Revisit 成人X站’s Facing Fentanyl series: How a synthetic opioid became the deadliest drug in America

Authorities also want to curb public drug use, which has become more visible in major cities such as Portland and Seattle due to growing homelessness.

Kotek, Oregon鈥檚 governor, this week released a proposal that calls for the state, Multnomah County and the city of Portland each to declare a 90-day fentanyl emergency and establish a command center to improve coordination between law enforcement, outreach workers and service providers. She has also urged providers to expand their hours.

When the Legislature convenes for its short session in February, Kotek also wants lawmakers to consider outlawing public drug use.

Banning public use has been a major talking point among Portland officials and lawmakers in recent months. Portland City Council approved such a ban in September, but it鈥檚 contingent on state law changing.

Law enforcement officials have advocated for such a measure, saying a 2020 ballot initiative that decriminalized possession of small drug amounts has made it difficult to stop public use.

鈥淐onfronting our most pressing challenges requires the hope and fortitude of an entire community,鈥 Kotek said.

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As Pacific Northwest fentanyl crisis surges, officials grapple with how to curb it