Pubdate: Sun, 12 Oct 2003 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2003 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Author: David Klepper The Sun News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Treatment or Poison? PLANNED ADDICTION CLINIC FOCUS OF HORRY COUNTY DEBATE About 65 Grand Strand residents regularly make the drive - many of them every day - to the Charleston Center for drug and alcohol addiction to take a small drink of a cherry-flavored liquid they say keeps them clean and sober. It's methadone, a drug created in the 1940s and first used a painkiller but now used as a stand-in for narcotics like heroin, OxyContin and other opiates. Recovering addicts use it to alleviate their addictions without the effects of withdrawal or the devilish effects of hard drug abuse. Methadone is now at the center of a controversy about the opening of Horry County's first narcotics treatment clinic, Center of Hope of Myrtle Beach, which will distribute methadone. The clinic, planned for Fantasy Harbour, has yet to receive permits to open. But what would be South Carolina's 10th methadone clinic has started a furor among nearby residents, merchants and public officials who fear it will bring more addicts, drugs and crime to the Strand. "I know we want to expand the tourism market, but I didn't know we want heroin addicts," said S.C. Rep. Thad Viers, who has vowed to block the clinic from opening. "If this clinic opens, the problems that it causes will be around for decades." The group behind Center of Hope already operates a clinic in Greenville. Like that one, the Myrtle Beach clinic will be for-profit and serve about 200 clients. The Charleston Center, the state's only nonprofit methadone clinic, is a self-sufficient division of the county health department. Dr. Rick Sherman of Greenville will be medical adviser for the Myrtle Beach clinic. He said the Grand Strand has a definite need for a methadone clinic. An estimate, based on the number of addicts traveling to clinics in Wilmington, N.C., and Charleston, indicates as many as 200 local residents may go elsewhere to get methadone. "There's clearly a problem if people are driving two hours to get help," Sherman said. "This drug has been around for decades. It's one of the most studied drugs ever created and one of the most successful ways of treating opiate addiction. It gives people their lives back." Vickie Johnson of North Myrtle Beach has been on methadone for 15 years after an addiction to prescription painkillers. Once a month, she drives to West Virginia to get methadone. "[Methadone] was a lifesaver for me," she said. "If I didn't have it to turn to, who knows what would have happened to me." Johnson has a job, a daughter and a college degree. She said she knows lawyers and doctors who are on methadone. "We're normal, everyday people," she said. "We lead normal lives because of methadone." Ed Johnson, the program coordinator for the Charleston Center, said methadone has been a victim of bad press. More than 200 people receive methadone at the Charleston Center. "Most people hear methadone and think strung-out junkies on heroin," he said. "Most of the people we see are here for prescription drugs like OxyContin." But Dan Schoettle, outpatient treatment coordinator at Shoreline Behavioral Health Services in Conway, said methadone often only hides the addiction instead of treating it. And he said he would prefer the clinic be located in a medical campus, further from residences, a school and a church. "There is a place for methadone," he said. "But I would want it in a hospital setting with doctors and nurses." Myrtle Beach recently changed its zoning rules to require any future methadone clinics to locate in areas zoned for hospitals or doctors' offices; that way, the clinics wouldn't be close to schools, churches or homes. The Charleston Center is located in the middle of the city's medical complex, which includes a veterans' hospital, the Medical University of South Carolina and the Charleston County Hospital. The nearest residence is a mile away. The Fantasy Harbour clinic's sponsors tried to open a clinic in 1998 in Socastee. Those plans fizzled after a similar outcry from residents prompted the state General Assembly to ban any new methadone clinics until new rules were written. Viers said he has heard from dozens of concerned residents, and he has the backing of the Horry County Council. The clinic was approved by the county Board of Adjustments and Zoning Appeals in July 2002, but Viers said he thinks that decision can be reversed or overruled by local or state officials. There are no studies to prove that a clinic's proximity to homes, schools or churches can cause an increase in crime. Still, Horry County and most other counties carefully restrict where clinics can locate, similar to the way adult bookstores, strip clubs and body piercing clinics are regulated. Just around the corner from the planned clinic is Bridgewater Academy, a charter school. Churches, homes and apartments are nearby. County zoning rules require that any methadone clinic be located at least 2,000 feet from any residences. The River Oaks development is 1,190 feet away. Though the county board has the power to overlook those rules, Viers said the Board of Adjustments and Zoning Appeals didn't follow proper procedure. Most nearby residents and business welcomed Viers' opposition to the clinic. "It's got to be stopped," said Lib Click, owner of Tamroc Kennels, which is less than a block away from the planned clinic. Click said people have broken into her kennels three times looking for veterinary drugs. She fears it will happen even more if the clinic opens. "We don't need that stuff in our community," she said. Schoettle also said he is disturbed by the way the clinic's sponsors got county approval. He said most reputable addiction treatment experts would have contacted the area's existing service - in this case, Shoreline. "Why were they hiding this?" Viers asked. "Is it because they knew there would be no other way to get it approved?" County council members said they didn't know about the clinic until a week ago. County Council Chairwoman Liz Gilland said the council supports Viers but won't get involved because it was the council-appointed zoning board that approved the clinic plans. "It wouldn't be kosher for us to get involved," Gilland said. However, she did say, "It would bring people into the community that are already hooked on drugs. And I don't think there's a vacuum when it comes to resources for drug addiction. There's a concern that if it's for-profit, they might not be sincerely concerned about their patients." Johnson of the Charleston Center said some for-profit methadone clinics "care only about the bottom line." But he vouched for the sponsors of Myrtle Beach's Center of Hope, saying they are conscientious, legitimate professionals. "The clinic in Greenville is a good one," he said. He said Horry County needs to learn all the facts about methadone before deciding whether to welcome the clinic. "Drug addiction is a disease," he said. "And most opposition to methadone is out of fear. It's knee-jerk, reactionary histrionics. You can ignore the problem [of drug addiction], but it won't go away. If you ignore it, be careful, because you're ignoring your own people." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake