Pubdate: Tue, 28 Nov 2006 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2006 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Note: Does not print out of town letters. Author: Associated Perss Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) HEARING FOR CLINIC TO DRAW PROTESTERS A proposal to open a methadone clinic in Mercer County has led the local Chamber of Commerce to organize a protest caravan headed to Charleston today. California-based CRC Health Group has filed paperwork with the state Health Care Authority seeking approval to start a drug treatment facility using methadone to wean addicts from opium-based drugs like heroin and oxycodone. CRC, the largest for-profit drug treatment provider in the country, reported in its filing with the state that it expects to initially spend $150,000 establishing the facility in Princeton. Thousands of residents, spurred by the Princeton-Mercer County Chamber of Commerce, have signed a petition objecting to the proposal. - advertisement - "We're not opposed to having a clinic to help people get off the harder drugs," Robert Farley, president of the chamber, said Monday. "What we're opposed to is an unorganized, for-profit business without a plan for weaning people off methadone." Dozens of residents are expected to make the 95-mile trip Tuesday from Princeton to Charleston to attend the authority's public hearing on the proposal. Phil Herschman, president of CRC's Outpatient Treatment Program Division, said the company is used to opposition when it opens a facility that uses methadone. "The opposition is not unusual," he said. "It's based primarily on myth." Local opposition normally decreases after a clinic has been opened because concerns about increased crime and other problems are usually allayed, he said. CRC operates seven clinics in West Virginia that use methadone in treatment. Nationwide, it has 60 such clinics in 17 states, treating about 24,000 people daily. Farley said before he can support a methadone clinic in Princeton he wants to see more stringent state regulations in place. Earlier this year, the Legislature considered adopting new rules regarding the licensing of methadone clinics, but failed to act. West Virginia has eight clinics that use methadone to treat people addicted to drugs like heroin, morphine and oxycodone. All have opened since 2000. According to the Health Care Authority, three applications for new clinics -- including CRC's proposal -- are pending. On Monday, the Food and Drug Administration issued a public health advisory regarding the dangers of overdosing on methadone, which, besides drug treatment, is also used as a painkiller. Taking too much of the drug can cause slow or shallow breathing and dangerous changes in heart beat that patients might not feel, according to the FDA. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman