Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jul 2004 Source: Sunday Gazette-Mail (WV) Copyright: 2004, Sunday Gazette-Mail Contact: http://sundaygazettemail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1404 Author: Tara Tuckwiller, Staff Writer MORATORIUM EXPIRES ON METHADONE CLINICS 7 New Facilities Would Bring W.Va. Total To 15 Seven new methadone clinics are applying to set up shop in West Virginia, now that the state's moratorium on methadone clinic applications expired last week. The state Health Care Authority imposed the six-month moratorium to give itself a break from methadone hopefuls while regulators write the first-ever state rules for the clinics. Those rules won't be ready until early next year, said Sheila Kelly of the Department of Health and Human Resources. That would be the earliest that any new clinics could actually open. Meanwhile, seven clinics are already selling methadone in West Virginia, and an eighth has been approved. Together, they netted more than $4 million in pure profit last year - more than half of that at one clinic in Charleston. - - advertisement- The proliferation of methadone clinics, which did not exist in West Virginia until 2001, was part of what prompted Delegate Marshall Long, D-Mercer, to introduce legislation this spring that ultimately required the new rules. Long, a physician, said he and his family have gotten threatening phone calls over the legislation. "I've had some phone calls from people in Virginia about how I'm going to cause all these people to be in so much agony, they'll have to go out and commit crimes because they won't be able to get their methadone," Long said. Methadone is supposed to halt drug addicts' craving for opioids, such as OxyContin, which are widely abused in Appalachia. West Virginia methadone clinics attract clients from surrounding states, such as Ohio, which won't allow for-profit methadone clinics at all. The new West Virginia rules won't outlaw any methadone clinics, but will require them to meet certain standards of operation, test their clients for drugs, report the number of clients who are eventually weaned from the drug, and more. The state will also fine and penalize clinics that don't comply. CRC Health Group Inc., a national methadone chain with six clinics in West Virginia (including the Charleston clinic), wants to open four more. The state has already approved one for Weirton. Two more, in Mineral and Greenbrier counties, were approved in 2001, but they never opened and CRC has to reapply. The fourth clinic would be in Mercer County. Colonial Management Group, another national chain, has applied to open clinics in Charleston, Summersville and Morgantown. Valley-Alliance Treatment Services Inc. also wants to open a methadone clinic in Morgantown. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D