[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 39 (Thursday, March 10, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1433-S1434]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMPREHENSIVE ADDICTION AND RECOVERY BILL
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, 8 years ago, I convened the first in a
series of hearings in Vermont where the Senate Judiciary Committee
examined
[[Page S1434]]
the growing problem of drug addiction in rural communities. As we
gathered in Rutland in March 2008, the mayor noted in his opening
statement that there was a part of him that wished that the committee
did not have to be there in his city that day. He wished that his
community was not facing the scourge of drug abuse and addiction that
was creeping across rural America.
But in true Vermont fashion, Mayor Louras and the other community
leaders, law enforcement officials, and health professionals who
gathered with us that day in March 2008 did not shy away from the
problem. Instead, we had an honest discussion about how to fight this
problem together and about how the Federal Government could help. Over
the past 8 years, we have continued this important conversation at
other hearings I convened in St. Albans, in Barre, and again in
Rutland. We have heard testimony from community leaders and officials
throughout Vermont about the growing problem of opioid addiction. In
St. Albans, for example, Dr. Fred Holmes told us tragic stories about
teenagers getting hooked on OxyContin and other opioids and then
committing crimes to support their habits. These stories have been
heartbreaking.
Despite these difficult circumstances, I am struck by the
determination of Vermonters to come together to address this crisis--
and to do so not just through law enforcement and locking people up,
but through comprehensive prevention, treatment, and recovery programs.
In Rutland, for example, Project VISION brings together city
officials, law enforcement, and social services to work together, all
in the same office, to confront the problems of drug abuse and related
crime. What they have found is that something as simple as sharing
office space improves communication and coordination and begins to turn
the tide.
Mary Alice McKenzie, executive director of the Boys & Girls Club,
testified at the most recent hearing in Rutland about children who are
neglected because their parents are opioid addicts and how there is
sometimes no money for food because parents have spent it on drugs.
Kids are also becoming addicts at younger and younger ages. The Boys &
Girls Club has responded by extending evening hours and staying open on
Saturdays. They now serve dinner 6 nights a week and drive kids home
after dark. They provide safety for these children. They are also
working with schools and public health officials to provide education
and prevent them from getting swept up in that world.
At that same hearing, Vermont's health department commissioner, Harry
Chen, described to us Vermont's innovative and successful ``hub and
spoke'' treatment model. This system has two levels of care, with the
patients' needs determining the appropriate level. Although challenges
remain and waiting lists are still too long, I believe this system can
be a model for the Nation's response to the opioid crisis.
Earlier this year, we heard powerful testimony from Governor Shumlin
about the progress that Vermont has made because of this comprehensive
approach--but also about the work that still remains to be done.
Vermont's focused and persistent efforts are now drawing attention and
replication in communities across the Nation.
In many ways, the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act, or CARA,
builds upon the work in Vermont.
To specifically address the opioid problem in Vermont and other rural
areas, I made sure that CARA will help get the overdose-reversal drug
naloxone into more of our rural communities. Getting naloxone into more
hands will save lives. I also ensured that CARA includes a new Federal
grant program to fund expanded treatment options for heroin and opioid
abuse and Federal funding to expand State-led anti-heroin task forces.
I am proud to be a cosponsor of CARA, and I am glad to see the Senate
pass this bill. This bill is historic because it marks the first time
that we are treating addiction like the public health crisis that it
is. We are not imposing harsh and arbitrary mandatory minimum sentences
on those who abuse drugs. We are not condemning the poor and sick among
us to be warehoused in our Nation's jails. Today I am hopeful that we
have finally learned our lesson from the failed war on drugs.
But our work is not done. The Senate missed an opportunity to provide
real funding for this effort when Republicans blocked Senator Shaheen's
amendment that would have provided for emergency supplemental
appropriations, so we need to keep fighting to ensure that we provide
the necessary resources to support implementation of this bill. In
Vermont and across this country, there are few issues more pressing
than opioid and heroin addiction, and I will not stop working with
people throughout our State to help fight this epidemic.
Mr. TESTER. Mr. President, earlier today the Senate overwhelming
passed the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act, which is a good
first step toward combatting the opioid addition epidemic facing our
Nation. The bill authorizes expanded treatment options and empowers
local health and law enforcement agencies to intensify efforts to
combat opioid addiction. This bill is a good start, but there is a lot
of work left to do to address this increasingly dire situation. This
body needs to put real resources behind the initiatives we approved
today and place a greater priority on investing in research for non-
opioid alternatives to pain management.
The CDC estimated that, in 2014, overdose related to prescription
pain killers killed nearly 19,000 Americans. In Montana alone,
according to the Montana Department of Public Health and Human
Services, prescription drug overdoses led to at least 369 deaths and
more than 7,200 hospital inpatient admissions and emergency department
encounters statewide over a recent 3-year period. The effects of opioid
addiction are undisputedly devastating.
It is also important to keep in mind that chronic pain is a very real
problem that affects millions of Americans. When discussing the
negative consequences of opioids, we must also remember that effective
treatments for chronic pain are absolutely necessary for those
struggling with long-term pain management.
That is why I believe it is time to devote more energy and funding to
the development of non-opioid painkillers. Early stage research in my
home State of Montana is demonstrating incredible promise in developing
non-opioid drugs that could help treat both chronic and acute pain. I
am confident that medical professionals will eventually be empowered to
offer their patients effective pain management alternatives that may
significantly reduce our society's reliance on opioids.
I look forward to working with my colleagues in the coming months to
find ways to invest in the research and development of non-opioid
painkillers. In the meantime, I encourage Federal agencies, such as the
National Institutes of Health, to ramp up focus on finding alternative
treatments for chronic pain to reduce our Nation's dependency on
opioids. Thank you.
(At the request of Mr. Reid, the following statement was ordered to
be printed in the Record.)
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