Pubdate: Fri, 18 Jul 2003 Source: Santa Fe New Mexican (NM) Copyright: 2003 The Santa Fe New Mexican Contact: http://www.sfnewmexican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/695 Author: Marissa Stone ESPANOLA ADDICTION CENTER CLOSING ITS DOORS Amistad Operator Said Local Politicking Played A Part In Move ESPANOLA -- A recovering cocaine addict was feeling insecure Thursday after hearing that the place he relies on for counseling for his addiction would only be around two more months. "This place has touched a lot of lives and saved a lot of lives," said Orlando Baca, 30, of Chimayo, who was at a group meeting at Amistad de Nuevo Mexico on North Coronado Street. "I cried after I heard they were leaving." Amistad, which had a contract with the state Department of Health, announced Wednesday it would not try to renew its contract for a fifth year to provide services to drug users in Rio Arriba and northern Santa Fe counties. Amistad is fighting one of the most entrenched, toxic drug cultures that the Arizona-based company has dealt with in 30 years. It also has had to fight a "politically hostile work environment in which some local officials seemed more interested in ensuring Amistad's failure than helping the community's drug addicts," said a letter from Bette Fleishman, chief operations officer of Amity Foundation of Tucson, which operates Amistad. Fleishman wrote to Region 2 Behavioral Health Providers Inc. explaining the work it had done and why it would not seek a new contract. Region 2 will award a new contract that begins Sept. 1. Since 1999, Amistad's case managers have served about 1,900 people at its clinic in Espanola, as well as providing outreach to nearby jail inmates. The organization was awarded a $900,000 contract last year. The state Department of Health initially awarded the contract to Amistad in 1999 because local substance-abuse treatment providers failed to address an escalating epidemic of heroin abuse and drug overdoses in the area, Fleishman wrote. Around 1999, the local and national media focused attention on Rio Arriba County because it led the state and the nation in illicit per-capita drug-overdose deaths. At least 18 people died last year in Rio Arriba from drug overdoses, compared with 12 in 2001 and 19 in 2000. Inmates from the Espanola jail who receive treatment from Amistad have said counselors with the program have helped them turn their lives around, making them see new possibilities and a way out of the drug lifestyle. "This place has helped a lot of people," said a 24-year-old Chimayo man at Amistad on Thursday who declined to give his name. "But if a person really wants it, they can go to another program and do it." Four organizations have applied for the $800,000 contract to provide drug-treatment services in the area, said Guillermo Brito, executive director of Region 2, which distributes Health Department funding to drug-treatment providers in 10 Northern New Mexico counties. Brito would not say which organizations applied for the contract. The new treatment provider, which will be awarded the one-year contract Aug. 1, will try to make a smooth transition with clients and administrative matters, he said. The contractor will provide inpatient and outpatient services, daily treatment and case management, in addition to services for local jail inmates, Brito said. The new contract could be awarded to a collaboration of several treatment entities, Brito said. Amistad endorsed Rio Arriba Family Care Network for the job. RAFCAN is a coalition of 45 community organizations that address health, welfare and economic issues in Rio Arriba County. Before Amistad announced its departure, the sparse drug-treatment services in the area had been taxed by a forced temporary closure of the Rio Grande Treatment Center in Embudo because of mold contamination this spring. And Saint Francis Academy, an Espanola drug, alcohol and psychological treatment center for juveniles, closed in early 2002, in part because of insufficient state funding. Gov. Bill Richardson addressed the scourge of drugs on Northern New Mexico at a meeting at Espanola City Hall on Wednesday, saying something must be done to stem the epidemic. The governor acknowledged there are turf battles among drug-treatment providers and in order for the battle against drug and heroin addiction to be effective, he said, disparate groups must band together. "Amistad has done a service," Brito said. "They've done the job they needed to do -- the state continued to give them the contract, which meant they were hitting their goals and targets." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart