Pubdate: Thu, 05 May 2005 Source: Times-Journal, The (Fort Payne, AL) Copyright: 2005 Times-Journal Contact: http://www.times-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1883 Author: Kelly Townsend Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) DA OPPOSES DRUG CLINIC DeKalb County District Attorney Mike O'Dell is opposing a proposed methadone clinic in Fort Payne, saying the clinic would serve no purpose and could actually hurt efforts to combat drug addiction. In a Wednesday press release, O'Dell also said that assuming a local clinic is needed is wrong. "Apparently, the proposal to place a methadone clinic in Fort Payne is based on the assumption that there exists a need for such a clinic. I feel very strongly that this assumption is erroneous. I work with our local Court Referral Office, and am familiar with the daily drug-testing that occurs in our area," O'Dell said. Holland and Heatherly Inc., a Cullman company, recently filed an application with the State Health Planning and Development Agency to open Sand Mountain Recovery Center in a building at 2017 Gault Ave., across from Save-A-lot. Jennie Logan, a spokesperson with the state agency, said in order for an application to be filed, a letter of intent must first be sent out to individuals within the county the center is intended to open in. "Once the letter of intent is sent out, and the application is filed, interested parties who wish to submit written statements, or indicate a desire to appear before the Certificate of Need Review Board, to object the plan, have 30 days to do so," Logan said. The deadline for objections in written statements is May 31 and a public hearing will be later in the summer. "A methadone clinic is a business, a business I strongly believe we do not need in our community," O'Dell said in a press release. Court Referral records over the past year indicate 13,972 individual drug tests were performed locally, according to O'Dell. Those drug test results, according to O'Dell, do not support the need for a clinic. "These tests were conducted for every court in DeKalb County, as well as for the Department of Human Resources, local employers, doctors' offices, parents of juveniles, and others," O'Dell said. According to O'Dell, only 163, or a little more than 1 percent, were for opiates. Methadone clinics were originally established to provide a means to take heroin addicts off the street and reduce crime associated with illegal drug use, according to O'Dell. "In later years, the clinics were expanded to include replacement therapy for other opiates," O'Dell said. Brenda Heatherly, with Holland and Heatherly Inc., said the center would specialize in treating people who are addicted to drugs such as Loratab, hydrocodone, morphine and OxyCotin. Fort Payne Mayor Bill Jordan said the city is in the process of writing a letter in opposition to the methadone clinic. "We feel like we have the necessary things in place and feel like it would bring people with problems from other states into our city and that is something we don't need," Jordan said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin