Lexington's Opioid Abatement Commission is seeking public input at town halls Feb. 22 and 29.
LEXINGTON — Lexington’s Opioid Abatement Commission has been meeting since September 2023. In June they will present their recommendations to Mayor Linda Gorton. Several organizations and businesses have presented. Some have been more focused on opioid use disorder (OUD) than others.?
It’s imperative that the Opioid Abatement Commission keeps the purpose of the settlement funds in the forefront when considering possibilities for projects to recommend to the mayor. In fact, each meeting should open with a reading of its purpose as defined in the presentation on Opioid Information and Strategies.?
“The money is meant to be used as remediation for the way corporations aggressively promoted opioid painkillers fueling an overdose crisis that has now largely transitioned to illicit drugs, like fentanyl.”?
Otherwise, monies could leak into other projects not related to OUD.
The commission has taken as its priorities.
Regarding issues at the jail, it’s important they make it clear that any funds coming from the abatement money is focused on those with an OUD. Kentucky Revised Statutes Chapter 15 states:
“Funding can be provided that supports the education of law enforcement or other first responders regarding appropriate practices and precautions when dealing with opioids or individuals with opioid use disorder or co-occurring substance use or mental health issues.” Therefore, if a no-camping ban is enacted, law enforcement will have to be trained to realize that often homeless citizens have nowhere to go and should be treated with respect and not as criminals.
A low barrier shelter needs to be created for this purpose. During the Jan. 12 OAC meeting Jeff Herron from the Office of Homelessness Prevention and Intervention said, “operating a successful, low barrier shelter requires medical support on site that has a specialty in addiction, mental health services, and security to be able to handle issues that arise.” This would be costly and therefore it is necessary for the commission to recommend providing the funds to create such a shelter.
In his presentation Herron pointed out that “housing is health care and housing is recovery.” Just as there are numerous alcoholics who live in their own homes and deal with their disease and recovery, those suffering from OUD also need housing in order to deal with their disease.
Herron reminded the commission that “settlement funds present a unique opportunity to design a system better meeting community needs.” The Office of Homelessness Prevention and Intervention has done extensive research and is the obvious basis for the OAC to reach its goal for remediation.
Addiction takes many forms and is a major crisis. The Opioid Abatement Commission, however, has been tasked to serve only individuals with opioid use disorder or co-occurring substance use or mental health issues. It is my hope that there will be significant accountability that money given to any agency goes to those with OUD.?
Lexington’s Opioid Abatement Commission will host a town hall at 6:30-7:30 on Thursday, Feb. 22, at the Lexington Senior Center, 195 Life Lane and at 6-7 p.m. on Feb. 29? at Consolidated Baptist Church, 1925 Russell Cave Road.?
The next Opioid Abatement Commission meeting is at 10 a.m. Friday, March 8, in the Lexington council chambers. You can sign up to speak during the public comment time. If you have a loved one who is suffering from OUD and want to see that reparations are made, you have? opportunities to share your experiences. Or you can email the commissioners at [email protected]?
It’s important, perhaps vital, that we help keep the Lexington Opioid Abatement Commission focused on opioid abatement.?
]]>Opioid abatement efforts should focus on housing and access to medical and dental care, writes Laverne Zabielski. (Getty Images)
I attended Lexington’s Opioid Abatement Commission executive committee meeting on Jan. 4. The public is always invited. We sat in chairs behind the commissioners’ table and listened to a concerned committee explore numerous ways to address the opioid crisis.?
The discussions led to formulating the agenda for the Jan. 12 full commission meeting in the Council Chambers at 10 a.m. This is relentless and hard work. There is much to consider and little time.?
I? am a concerned and impacted citizen. While witnessing the amount of research the commission must pursue, my fear is that this dedicated and committed group will forget the purpose of? the settlement funds presented in the handout on page three at the Oct. 13, 2023 meeting: “The money is meant as remediation for the way corporations aggressively promoted opioid painkillers, fueling an overdose crisis that has now largely transitioned to illicit drugs, like fentanyl.”
Currently the commission is focusing on three areas: prevention, treatment and recovery. The prevention focus is important but feels to me like a rabbit hole.? Many programs and strategies have been implemented over the years. Until we have a culture that pays at least a living wage, places housing as a right over profit and has universal health care, there will be no effective widespread, sustainable prevention.
My concern is if too much time and funds are spent on efforts at prevention there will not be enough for active and recovering addicts. Indeed, at the Dec.? 8, 2023 meeting, commissioner John Moses emphasized the need to “lift the voices of those people who are still in active addiction and listen to the community so that we don’t have preconceived notions about what is needed.”
Tayna Fogle, a member of the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Council,? organized a meeting on Sept. 6, 2023 at the Lyric for the purpose of hearing from concerned residents and homeless citizens. One homeless man stated his exasperation with agencies being funded, yet not having enough personnel to be able to answer phone calls. That is my fear. Money goes to agencies without serving the people affected. If funding is spread too thin, that will happen again.
There needs to be a coordinated method of ongoing accountability implemented by the commission so that the agencies receiving funding use the money for opioid addicts not just for staff and bureaucracy. Active and recovering opioid addicts being served need to have social workers and compassionate people to communicate with when things are not going right.?
A Center for Opioid Abatement Prevention, Treatment and Recovery is needed where impacted people can go to find the resources they need. A central place where mothers can also go to find out where the detox facilities immediately available are located.?
All involved need to be heard. Opioid addicts need advocates who can offer recourse. I don’t mean they should be given a form or questionnaire to fill out. I mean being able to share their experiences to a committed listener who has the power to take action.
Treatment and recovery for opioid addicts needs to be the primary focus of the abatement money, including housing and access to medical and dental care. The loss of teeth is a side effect of opioid addiction. Often people think that’s not important.?
If an addict becomes drug free, there’s hope. If an addict has a place to live, that’s progress. But a recovering addict without teeth will have a hard time finding a job. Fulfilling these needs is another way of breaking the cycle of recovery and relapse.?
Given reparations are the stated purpose of the opioid abatement funds, my hope is that is also the mission of Lexington’s Opioid Abatement Commission.
Opioids are such a huge problem that it? is easy to lose focus. If you are an impacted citizen, I encourage you to come to the next meeting and share your stories and questions. Help Lexington’s Opioid Abatement Commission stay on task. This is a community disease and requires everyone’s input.
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