Pubdate: Thu, 18 Mar 2004 Source: Catonsville Times (MD) Copyright: 2004 Patuxent Publishing Company Contact: http://news.mywebpal.com/index.cfm?pnpid=351 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/786 Author: Pete Pichaske Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Note: Info on the legislation referred to in the article is online at HB 1138: http://mlis.state.md.us/2004rs/billfile/hb1138.htm and SB 769: http://mlis.state.md.us/2004rs/billfile/sb0769.htm METHADONE BILL HITS SNAG IN ANNAPOLIS Schrader Could Delay Bid To Limit Clinic Sites A bill to limit the location of methadone clinics in Howard County has run into heavy opposition in the General Assembly, prompting one sponsor to consider dropping the legislation and a County Council member to say he will propose local limits. Sen. Sandy Schrader, the Columbia Republican who is the lead sponsor on the state Senate bill, said she is "leaning" toward pulling the legislation for the year. Schrader said she is not giving up on the idea of limiting where clinics can open in the county, but might refer the bill to "summer study" and sponsor a revised bill next year. This year's bill would prohibit methadone clinics from opening within 1,000 feet of a school or residential area. "I think we can work out something," said Schrader, adding that she wanted to consult with state health officials, who oversee methadone clinics. "I don't want this to become us versus them. I realize people need these clinics." County Council member Dave Rakes, the Columbia Democrat who led the battle against a clinic proposed for Oakland Mills last summer, said he will introduce legislation aimed at resolving the problem "within the month." Rather than banning the clinics from certain areas, Rakes said his legislation probably will designate zones where clinics could be opened. "I've said all along we need treatment for those individuals who've gotten caught up in these drugs, but we need to protect the neighborhood concept as well," said Rakes this week. "I'm going to get cracking on this tomorrow." Del. Neil Quinter, the Columbia Democrat who is sponsoring the House version of the bill, this week said that he will not pull his bill. "If this approach doesn't work, we'll see what other approach we can use, but right now, I'm committed to this approach," he said. Methadone battle continues The General Assembly bills are an outgrowth of a pair of prolonged community battles last summer over two methadone clinics proposed for Howard County, one in Oakland Mills, the other in Elkridge. Both proposals were dropped in the face of intense community opposition. Methadone clinics are facilities where heroin addicts are given daily doses of methadone to help them overcome their heroin habit. Howard County now has one such clinic and treatment advocates say it needs more. But neighbors objected to the two proposed last summer, saying they would endanger homeowners and, in the Oakland Mills case, students at nearby schools. At a hearing last week before the Senate Education, Health and Environmental Affairs Committee, Schrader pointed out that several states already restrict methadone clinics. Just this year, she said, Virginia lawmakers passed legislation prohibiting public methadone clinics from opening with a half-mile of a school or day care center. In Maryland, Baltimore County and the city of Westminster also have shown an interest in limiting clinics. Schrader's proposal was praised at the March 10 hearing by Oakland Mills resident Ruth Cargo, who said limits on clinics are not necessarily anti-drug treatment. "We can limit the location of methadone clinics so they are not near schools," she said. "We can both allay parents' fears and provide excellent locations for drug treatment." But opponents lambasted the bill as unfair, biased and potentially illegal _ the same criticisms leveled at the House bill in a House committee hearing weeks ago. Ann Ciekot of the Maryland chapter of the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence said restrictions on drug-treatment facilities have been struck down in Maryland and elsewhere because they violate the Americans with Disabilities Act, which guarantees access to treatment for people with disabilities _ including drug addicts. She also said the limits would make it harder to find drug treatment at a time when only 24 percent of those in Maryland seeking treatment are able to get it. Ciekot said the bill "perpetuates and substantiates unfounded fears that people have" about drug-treatment facilities. "Instead of feeding into the fears of our neighbors, many of whom have never been in a methadone clinic nor talked with someone in recovery thanks to methadone, we should be educating them about how treatment programs are part of the solution, not the problem," Ciekot said. The Drug Policy and Public Health Strategies Clinic at the University of Maryland School of Law also registered its opposition. Law student Jeanne Brennan told lawmakers the bill violates not only the ADA but the Maryland Constitution. It would be a zoning regulation, she explained, and in chartered counties such as Howard, zoning regulations are the province of the county government, not the state. The bill "is nothing more than a local law that the General Assembly has no authority to enact," said Brennan in a statement. Local lawmakers have wrestled with the legality of limiting methadone clinics since demands for limits were first heard last summer. Schrader and Quinter sought legal advice from the state Attorney General's Office before introducing their legislation, and were told the proposal could be made as a local bill. Schrader said this week she will ask for a second letter of legal advice on the other legal questions raised. "I want to make very sure we don't open ourselves up to lawsuits," said Schrader. "I think there is common ground that could be found. "We knew there would be opposition," she added. "We needed to get this out in the open to have the discussion." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin