The Trump administration is awarding nearly $2 billion in new funding to states and local governments to help fight the opioid crisis.
Health and Human Services Secretary Alexander Azar says the grants come from money that President Donald Trump secured from Congress last year. Trump says “nothing is more important than defeating the opioid and addiction crisis.”
The Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration is awarding $932 million to every state and some U.S. territories to help provide treatment and recovery services that meet local needs.
Separately, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is getting $900 million under a new, three-year program to help state and local governments better track overdose data. Forty-seven states and the District of Columbia are among jurisdictions sharing $301 million in the first year.
In announcing the move, White House counsel Kellyanne Conway told reporters in a conference call that their administration is trying to interject the word “fentanyl” into the “everyday lexicon” as part of their efforts to increase awareness.
“Central to our effort to stop the flood of fentanyl and other illicit drugs is our unprecedented support for law enforcement and their interdiction efforts,” she said. Conway then brought up the DHS seizures of fentanyl last year, which totaled an equivalent to 1.2 billion lethal doses.
Just weeks ago, The White House released a series of private-sector advisories aimed to help businesses protect themselves and their supply chains from inadvertent trafficking of fentanyl and synthetic opioids.
The four advisories aim to stem the production and sale of illicit fentanyl, fentanyl analogs, and other synthetic opioids. The advisories focus on the manufacturing, marketing, movement, and money of illicit fentanyl.
In March last year, the interior Department created a tribal task force aimed to specifically combat the crisis on tribal lands. Since then, the department has arrested over 422 individuals and the seizure of 4,000 pounds of illegal drugs worth $12 million on the street, including over 35,000 fentanyl pills.
Conway, in the conference call, described the epidemic of pain relievers as an “opioid and fentanyl crisis.”