Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 Source: New Jersey Herald (NJ) Copyright: 2013, The New Jersey Herald Contact: http://www.njherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2162 Author: Jessica Masulli Reyes STATE LAWMAKERS TACKLING DRUG CRISIS Local officials, prompted by a state report last week and a New Jersey Herald three-part series last month, have begun drafting and supporting legislation that puts them on the forefront of the fight against prescription drug and heroin abuse. State Assembly members Alison Littell McHose and Parker Space, as well as state Sen. Steven Oroho, are supporting several pieces of pending legislation that would include improving the state's Prescription Monitoring Program, toughening penalties for burglaries and changing the way certain drugs are measured. "We can't let this get any worse than it already is," spokesman Louis Crescitelli said. "Senator Oroho, Assemblyman Space and Assemblywoman McHose are taking this very seriously and, it appears, so is the rest of the Legislature." The report from the State Commission of Investigation, released on Wednesday, offered a harsh look at how "the so-called war on drugs" has changed significantly since it was launched four decades ago. It says that the state is awash in pill mills benefitting organized crime, crooked doctors who are nothing more than drug dealers, and a new generation of addicts who have turned to stealing to support a prescription drug and eventually heroin habit. "What once was a menacing background narrative centered narrowly around subculture-based substances like opium, morphine and heroin has exploded into a mainstream horror story whose first chapter often begins with pill bottles in the average household medicine cabinet," the report says. But the local legislators hope that by changing and updating key laws, the state can address these issues on all fronts -- from the doctors' offices to law enforcement and prosecution to recovery for addicts. In the Statehouse The state's report offered several recommendations for places where legislators could begin to combat the drug epidemic. Recommendations included toughening the standards on doctors, imposing more severe criminal and financial penalties for prescription drug diversion, and creating a statewide task force. It also recommended making mandatory the optional Prescription Monitoring Program, which is a statewide database where doctors and pharmacists can input patient prescription information, as well as inputting information daily rather than the current standard of every 15 days. Oroho, Space and McHose were already a step ahead on supporting legislation that addresses some of these recommendations since the New Jersey Herald series called "Overprescribed" dealt with many of the same issues last month. The three are now looking at what additional legislation may need to be drafted or if current pending legislation should be reworked to better address what the report recommended. "This investigation (report), as we go through the legislation for the Prescription Monitoring Program, will be helpful for us with that," Oroho said. "This is a huge problem." Pieces of the legislation that the Assembly and Senate will be voting on to combat the drug epidemic include: - - Assembly Bill A4151 and Senate Bill S2781 -- McHose and Space are co-sponsoring the Assembly bill that would allow certain drug dealing offenses to be graded by units rather than weight. Some drugs like LSD and methamphetamines are not sold by weight and are difficult to measure by weight, so this legislation would give prosecutors the option of basing charges on the number of units, such as a pill, tablet, capsule or packet. - - Assembly Bill A4220 and Senate Bill S2926 -- McHose and Space are co-sponsoring the Assembly bill and Oroho is sponsoring the Senate bill that would improve the Prescription Monitoring Program, as was recommended in the state's report, by seeking to get more participation from doctors. The bill would allow doctors to designate an employee from their practice to access the database and would require the state Division of Consumer Affairs, which oversees the program, to notify law enforcement if there is potential misuse of prescription drugs. This bill would also make it possible for New Jersey's database to share and receive information from out-of-state programs so that a person cannot cross the border unnoticed to fill prescriptions. - - Senate Bill S2762 -- Local legislators are not at this point co-sponsors or sponsors for this bill, which would establish a controlled dangerous substance law enforcement coordinating task force, similar to what was proposed in the report. - - Several Senate and Assembly bills would upgrade the penalties for burglary or home invasions. While not directly drug related, these bills seek to address one aspect of the problem since often these crimes stem from drug abuse. - - Assembly Bill A3756 -- Co-sponsored by McHose and Space, this bill, recently passed by the Assembly, requires that information about availability of services from substance abuse treatment facilitations be posted on county and Division of Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens websites. After the series Aside from legislation being proposed, the New Jersey Herald's series also received a widespread response. The series focused on two individuals -- Ryan, a recovering prescription drug and heroin addict who was two years sober in the state Drug Court program, and Lisa Marie, a mother of three children who died from an overdose. Lisa Marie, 34, was found dead in her bed two days before Christmas from a combination of Xanax, oxycodone, oxymorphone, Flexeril, Cymbalta, caffeine and Benadryl. Leading up to her death, she was prescribed 140 prescriptions for thousands of pills from 68 different doctors and physician assistants over a 10-month period. Only twice did a pharmacy flag her name. Lisa Marie's sister-in-law Lee Hamilton said that after Lisa Marie's story was printed, the state Division of Consumer Affairs and Office of the Attorney General contacted her, expressing interest in looking into Lisa Marie's medical and prescription records. Readers also came forward with their own stories that portrayed both the joy of long-term recovery and the pain of overdose deaths. Karen Reed, of Sandyston, is one reader who contacted the Herald after the series ran. She shared the story of her son, TJ, who died from a mix of Xanax and methadone in 2010 at the age of 21. According to Reed, her oldest son died in 2003 in an accident, which left TJ struggling to come to terms with the loss as a teenager. "I think TJ had struggled a lot more than I realized with his brother's death, even though I did take him to speak to psychiatrists and psychologists and so forth," she said. As a teenager, TJ smoked marijuana and drank, but his mother said he eventually turned to pills. "I knew he was hanging with the wrong crowds," she said. TJ sought help in outpatient programs in his late teens, and Reed said she thought he was "doing quite well." He was working and was part of an iron workers union. But, at some point, TJ must have slipped back into his old ways. One night he returned from a friend's house late, after his mother had gone to bed. In the morning, he was dead in his bed. At first, his family thought he had died from smoking K2 spice, a synthetic marijuana that has since been made illegal, while having asthma. But the family learned after a medical examination that TJ had been on Xanax, which was prescribed to him in a mild dosage, and methadone, which he had obtained illegally. Reed thought that the person who sold the pills to TJ, as was made clear through a series of text messages from that night, would be arrested and charged, but she said nothing ever came of it since the person had not intended to kill TJ. "I was pretty upset that nothing was done about it," she said. Reed, who now has lost both of her children, said that she remembers TJ as a affectionate, kind person. She hopes parents will look deeply at their children's behavior, group of friends and life to know if they are doing drugs. "He would give anything to anyone ... but he had been taken advantage of for his kind heart," Reed said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom