Pubdate: Tue, 16 Mar 2004 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 2004 Roanoke Times Contact: http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/368 Author: Laurence Hammack Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) METHADONE CLINIC'S FUTURE STILL IN LIMBO It's "fairly unusual" for the application process to last two years, a state official said. A proposed methadone clinic in Roanoke is still months away from opening, nearly two years after applying for a state license. Since filing an application in April 2002, the company that plans to open the drug treatment center on Hershberger Road Northwest has seen its plans slowed by regulatory requirements, community opposition and a merger with another company. CRC Health Group officials said this week that the Roanoke Treatment Center will not open for another six to 12 weeks. Clinic operators had first predicted they would begin treating patients in February or March. The company still must receive a license from the state Department of Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Services, as well as approval from the Virginia Board of Pharmacy and the Drug Enforcement Administration. It's "fairly unusual" for the application process to last two years, according to Leslie Anderson, director of the Office of Licensing in the state agency that regulates methadone clinics. The state has gone from dealing with National Specialty Clinics, a Nashville, Tenn.-based company that filed the application and obtained a city business license, to CRC, which purchased the smaller company in December. Earlier this month, CRC officials submitted a revised policy manual for the clinic that state regulators requested last June, according to correspondence obtained through the Virginia Freedom of Information Act. "You need to be completing your policies and procedures as required throughout the regulations," a state regulator wrote in a June 9 letter to a National Specialty Clinics official in Indianapolis. Now that the policies have been submitted, the state must review them before scheduling a visit of the proposed site at 3208 Hershberger Road. "It's almost like we've started over," Anderson said of the process. But unlike National Specialty Clinics, CRC already operates two methadone clinics in Virginia, and has submitted policies already being used in the state. Joe Pritchard, vice president for operations for CRC's eastern region, said Monday that the process has been delayed by the merger with NSC. Community opposition also has played a role, as the company has spent time researching other sites that might be less controversial. Many Northwest Roanoke residents say a methadone clinic, which dispenses daily doses of the synthetic narcotic to recovering addicts of opium-based drugs such as heroin and OxyContin, will draw increased crime and drug activity to the area. CRC is open to the idea of shifting its operation from the Hershberger Road site to another location, as opponents have suggested, Pritchard said. However, that could be complicated by a bill, passed recently by the General Assembly, that would limit new methadone clinics from opening within a half-mile of any school or state-licensed day care center. The bill is awaiting Gov. Mark Warner's signature. "The new rule makes it more difficult for everybody," Pritchard said. Jeff Artis, who is leading community opposition to the Hershberger Road site, recently suggested in a commentary published in The Roanoke Times that the clinic be located at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Salem. Three days after Artis' commentary appeared, medical center Director Stephen Lemons released a statement explaining there is no room for a methadone clinic. "We already face a major strain on our system and the facilities," Lemons said. Even if a public clinic could be run from a federal facility designated for veterans - as has been done in other states - the location is complicated by another factor: It's less than a half-mile from East Salem Elementary School. Artis said Monday that he is still waiting to hear from CRC officials on whether they plan to open the Hershberger Road site. In recent meetings with community members, Artis said, the company seemed committed to looking at alternative sites after learning that more than 2,000 people have signed petitions against the location, and that opponents have already launched an economic boycott of any business that provides services to the clinic. Opponents have also said they plan to picket the facility if it opens, and to monitor patients as they come and go. "They understand what is waiting for them if they open," Artis said of the company. And while his group plans to conduct nonviolent protests, Artis said he has heard about other opponents who might have something else in mind. "It's going to get real, real interesting up here on Hershberger Road," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake