Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jan 2004 Source: Bluefield Daily Telegraph (WV) Copyright: 2004 Bluefield Daily Telegraph Contact: http://www.bdtonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1483 Author: Charles Owens Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) MORATORIUM COULD STALL METHADONE CLINIC PROJECT PRINCETON - A proposed moratorium on new methadone clinics in West Virginia could affect a project pending in Mercer County. The state Health Care Authority is scheduled to vote on a proposed moratorium Jan. 21, authority chairwoman Sonia Chambers said. "What the moratorium does is it gives us 180 days to work on whether we want to develop some additional standards," Chambers said. "So it basically puts on hold any of the applications we currently have coming before us. While we are looking at these different applications, we won't be approving any new ones while looking at the new standards. So it just sort of prevents any new applications from being filed, and it puts on hold any applications that are currently on the pipeline." A proposal earlier this year by National Specialty Clinics to open a methadone clinic in Mercer County prompted opposition from several area residents. The company later withdrew its plans to open clinics in Mercer, Mineral and Greenbrier counties because it was being sought by a bigger methadone seller, CRC Health Group Inc., according to an Associated Press report. NRC, which runs six methadone clinics in West Virginia, had already received permission from the authority to open the clinics, but the state would not transfer that permission to the new parent corporation. A day after the state approved CRC Health Group Inc.'s buyout of the West Virginia methadone clinics, CRC reapplied to open the Mercer, Mineral and Greenbrier clinics. The company must go through the HCA permitting process again. Dan Dunmyer, CEO of Princeton Community Hospital, said a moratorium would afford the state additional time to make well-thought-out decisions. "I think the state must do what is in the best interest of the communities -- not just Princeton, but the entire state of West Virginia," Dunmyer said. "If they implement a moratorium, they are trying to afford themselves the time to make decisions on such important issues." Chambers said a number of people have expressed concerns about methadone clinics to the authority, while others have voiced support for the clinics. "I think people who are supportive of methadone maintenance programs feel that they should be one of the treatment methods that are available to people who are addicted to opiates such as OxyContin," Chambers said. "People on the opposite side feels it simply keeps them on another drug, and doesn't get them off drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin