Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jan 2004 Source: Herald, The (WA) Copyright: 2004 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/190 Author: David Olson, Herald Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) METHADONE CLINIC KEPT ON HOLD EVERETT -- The city's first methadone clinic is now expected to open at the end of the month, an official with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration said Wednesday. Therapeutic Health Services had planned to open the clinic at 9930 Evergreen Way in December, but the DEA still hadn't given its approval. The agency's blessing is the last step before the clinic can open. The agency checks to make sure such clinics have proper security to prevent theft of the medication. Therapeutic Health Services already has received state permits. "I just don't know why they're dragging their feet," said Norman Johnson, executive director of Therapeutic Health Services. "There are 100 people who, at the moment the DEA stops dragging their feet, I can take off the street and put into treatment." Two DEA investigators inspected the clinic on Dec. 22, but Johnson said a local DEA official told him Wednesday that they still hadn't completed their report. DEA officials in Washington, D.C., will then review the report and make a decision. The new clinic will open within 48 hours of receiving DEA approval, Johnson said. "Everything is ready to go in Everett," he added. Thomas O'Brien, a spokesman for the DEA's Seattle field office, said the agency is following its normal procedures, but has been busier than usual the past few weeks. "I don't know of any problems with the application," O'Brien said. Methadone is used to treat people addicted to opiate drugs, including heroin and the painkiller OxyContin. The 7,500-square-foot clinic will initially serve 100 people from Snohomish County and is expected to reach its maximum capacity of 350 patients within a few months, Johnson said. Almost all of those first 100 patients currently use the group's Shoreline clinic. The rest get their methadone in Seattle. The opening of the Everett clinic will free up 100 spaces at the Shoreline and Seattle clinics for clients from King County, Johnson said. About 300 people are on waiting lists for the Shoreline and Seattle clinics, and some have been calling Therapeutic Health Services regularly to find out when they can start treatment, he said. "They want treatment so much that they've been consistently calling to see if the Everett clinic is open," Johnson said. Therapeutic Health Services had hoped to open a clinic in downtown Everett a year ago. But the City Council objected to the downtown site and restricted new drug-treatment centers in the city to two commercial areas south of Highway 526, the Boeing freeway. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom