Pubdate: Tue, 28 Sep 2004 Source: Daily World, The (LA) Copyright: South Louisiana Publishing 2004 Contact: http://www.dailyworld.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1740 Author: Alain de la Villesbret, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) METHADONE CLINIC TO CLOSE No one involved except a direct competitor wants the Opelousas Methadone Clinic to shut down. But it will be closed before Oct. 8. No one involved except a direct competitor has pushed the issue through the court system. Yet a Baton Rouge district court has forced the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals to withdraw the clinic's license. Everyone involved, except the direct competitor, has admitted the clinic is serving an important need in St. Landry Parish. But that need is being tossed aside as a technical aspect of the law forces the clinic to abandon about 40 recovering drug addicts. "That whole thing kind of smells. It has cornering-of-the-market implications," said state Sen. Donald Cravins, D-Arnaudville, whose district includes Opelousas. "No one believes the basis for closing the clinic has merit," he said. John, an Opelousas painter with a long-time pill addiction, has said he needs the clinic for his very survival. "This is all about money. There is no compassion at all for the people who need this clinic. This clinic has changed my life. I used to spend all week working just to spend my money on drugs. It's under control now. I've been clean for two years. I want my clinic," John said. Cravins, the Louisiana DHH, St. Landry Parish District Attorney Earl Taylor, St. Landry Parish Sheriff's Department Chief Deputy Laura Balthazar and 27th Judicial District Court Judge James T. Genovese all admit the parish has a clear need for the clinic, and the clinic is saving lives. But the treatment will no longer be available in the parish after next Friday. "It is not our agency that is closing them down. It is court order by Judge Kelley," DHH spokesman Robert Johannessen said Monday. "We have been in court for two years fighting for this clinic," he said. In 2002, basing his suit on the lack of a properly prepared needs assessment, Richard Delahoussaye, the former lobbyist who owns the competing Opioid Replacement Therapy Center in Breaux Bridge, filed suit to shut down the Opelousas clinic. "The proper venue for filing is where the defendant is domiciled, and the DHH is domiciled in East Baton Rouge Parish," said Opelousas attorney Garrett Duplechain, who is representing Alex John and Diana Mahannah-John, owners of the Opelousas Narcotic Treatment Clinic. The Johns freely admit that they did not get the paper work done in proper fashion, but they also stress that the DHH directed them to look at Opelousas when they filed a needs assessment for a clinic that they intended to open in Lafayette. "They sent us to Opelousas," Mahannah-John said. Also, as Cravins said, the "needs assessment seems moot because an obvious need has been established and that clinic has served its community well." Judge Timothy Kelley of the 19th Judicial District Court agreed with Delahoussaye's argument and ordered the clinic closed. The Johns appealed to the Third Circuit Court of Appeal and the Louisiana Supreme Court, the former affirmed the lower court's decision while the latter refused their writ. On Sept. 2, 2004, Judge James T. Genovese of the 27th Judicial District Court passed a 60-day injunction giving the clinic until Nov. 1 to make other arrangements for its patients. But Delahoussaye could not wait. He went back to Judge Kelley and obtained a cease and desist order that moved the date up almost a month. He is on record saying that everyone should have to play by the same rules. "It is customary to give a methadone clinic a certain amount of time to cease operations so that clients can make other arrangements. The date set by Judge Genovese was Nov. 2. But the decision by Judge Kelley in Baton Rouge pushed it up to Oct. 8," Duplechain said. According to Johannessen, the state legislature imposed a moratorium on the opening of new clinics on July 1, 2001 after a DHH statewide needs assessment showed that Louisiana had three and one half times the number of clinics it needs to service recovering addicts. The moratorium extends through 2008 although another statewide needs assessment is scheduled for 2005, according to Johannessen. "From our perspective, we wanted a moratorium to cut the regulatory costs of these clinics," Johannessen said. "It takes staff time to conduct a survey of a clinic on a yearly basis," he said. Johannessen was not able to immediately supply the costs, but said he will find the numbers this week. He also said that the goal was to reduce the number of clinics in the state. While the state was battling with those issues, the DHH issued a license to the Opelousas clinic. The license remained unchallenged until Delahoussaye filed suit. Since the moratorium was placed, only two clinics have been shut down, Johannessen confirmed Monday. One clinic in Tallulah was closed due to incompetence, he said. The only other clinic in the entire state to be forced to close is the Opelousas clinic, Johannessen confirmed Monday. "The whole thing just does not make a whole lot of sense," Cravins said Monday. "There is no reason that clinic should be forced to close. It defies every logical reason. The free market should decide the issue of whether or not these clinics survive. If you do not get the clients and retain the clients, you close down." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek