[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 74 (Wednesday, May 11, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H2223]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEROIN OPIOID CRISIS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Zeldin) for 5 minutes.
Mr. ZELDIN. Mr. Speaker, the growing heroin and opioid crisis has
especially hit home in my district in Suffolk County, New York. There
was a 2015 report issued in New York State that showed that, out of all
62 counties in New York, it was my home county that was hit the hardest
by the rise of heroin and opioid abuse. We had the highest number of
heroin-related overdose deaths of any county in New York.
As a member of the Bipartisan Task Force to Combat the Heroin
Epidemic, I have spoken with affected families directly. Addiction is a
truly devastating disease that shatters lives, families, and
communities. It is a disease that only continues to spread at rapid
rates, and more can and must be done to counteract the damage it has
done and prevent its rapid advancement.
Working closely with my local community, I have been pursuing a more
localized solution to address this crisis. Hosting multiple drug task
force roundtables in Suffolk County, I have been able to bring together
local elected officials, law enforcement, health professionals,
community groups, parents, concerned residents, and those in recovery
to discuss various ways that we can work together to combat this
epidemic. Over the past year, working with both local residents and my
colleagues in Congress, I have been pushing to advance legislation in
the House that would help provide us with the resources we need to end
the growing epidemic crisis on Long Island.
Just last week, joined by my local community, I was proud to announce
that there has been progress made to pass several important bills this
week aimed at improving and increasing access to treatment,
enforcement, and education. The House is now passing many of these
critically important measures over the course of the next few days.
While I have been dedicating the most amount of my time advocating
for the passage of the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act, CARA,
H.R. 593, many other important proposals are also moving forward.
One other bill that I cosponsor is H.R. 4641, which will be passing
today, which would improve the guidelines for prescribing opioids and
pain medication by creating a Federal interagency and stakeholder task
force that would review, modify, and update best practices for pain
management in prescribing pain medication. While there are many
legitimate reasons and needs for some to be treated with pain
medication, those highly addictive pills pose a serious risk. This
critical bill would help ensure that all parties, from prescribers to
patients, have access to the most up-to-date information so that lawful
prescription use does not become addicting.
Just a few of the other bills include the Examining Opioid Treatment
Infrastructure Act of 2016, H.R. 4982, which would require Congress
receive a report on substance abuse treatment availability and
infrastructure needs in the U.S., and legislation that would task a
Federal agency to create a plan on how to deal with the opioid and
heroin epidemic, H.R. 4976.
Legislation is passing to help stop the flow of illegal narcotics
into our country, to keep drugs out of our communities and off our
streets, such as legislation to help law enforcement officials identify
and target drug traffickers, H.R. 3380, and to allow for easier
prosecution of these criminals, H.R. 4985.
There is not one piece of legislation that will completely solve this
overwhelming crisis, but finally Congress is taking a big step forward
in the fight against drug abuse. We must always do everything in our
power to provide our local communities with the resources necessary to
help stop and prevent drug abuse through treatment, enforcement, and
education, which is why I will continue pushing these efforts in the
House.
I have spoken to parents of those recovering, parents of those who
are unfortunately lost. It is impacting lives. It is devastating
families.
Have a conversation in each of our districts, all 435 congressional
districts, and we all hear the story all too often. It is not any race,
gender, or socioeconomic status. It is not one particular school
district. It is impacting all of our children.
As the father of two 9-year-old girls, I visited their class last
week. I think of their generation, and it is important that this
generation in Congress today does everything in our power this week and
beyond to combat this epidemic.
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