The fight for heroin crisis funding: ‘We don’t need billboards. We need treatment’

Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (left) announced he is seeking $5.3 million to provide medication-assisted treatment and to purchase thousands of doses of naloxone, an overdose-reversal medication. Following the recommendation from the state’s Heroin and Opioid Emergency Task Force, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced that $3 million in state grants would be used to fight the epidemic. (WTOP collage via AP)
Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (left) announced he is seeking $5.3 million to provide medication-assisted treatment and buy thousands of doses of naloxone, an overdose-reversal medication. Following the recommendation from his state’s Heroin and Opioid Emergency Task Force, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced that $3 million in state grants would be used to fight the epidemic. (WTOP collage via AP)
“We’ve not done the right thing so far. Everyone knows it’s a problem. We don’t need billboards. We don’t need PSAs. We don’t need task forces,” said Mike Gimbel, former Baltimore County drug czar. “We need treatment.” (WTOP/Jamie Forzato)
“We’ve not done the right thing so far. Everyone knows it’s a problem. We don’t need billboards. We don’t need PSAs. We don’t need task forces,” said Mike Gimbel, former Baltimore County drug czar. “We need treatment.” (WTOP/Jamie Forzato)
Every suspected heroin addict that is arrested in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, receives a letter from Police Chief Tim Altomare, pleading with them to let the department help them on the road to recovery. (Courtesy Anne Arundel County police)
Every suspected heroin addict arrested in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, receives a letter from Police Chief Tim Altomare, pleading with them to let the department help them on the road to recovery. (Courtesy Anne Arundel County Police Department)
More than 3 grams of crack cocaine, nearly 1 gram of heroin, and a loaded revolver handgun was seized during a February 2015 traffic stop in Glen Burnie. Anne Arundel County Police arrested the two suspects. (Photo courtesy Anne Arundel County police)
More than three grams of crack cocaine, nearly a gram of heroin and a loaded revolver was seized during a February 2015 traffic stop in Glen Burnie. The Anne Arundel County police arrested two suspects. (Photo courtesy Anne Arundel County Police Department)
Anne Arundel County Police seized 45 bags of heroin (a total of more than 15 grams) and 71 strips of 8mg Suboxone in Glen Burnie in January 2016. About $560 in cash was also recovered. The drugs have a street value of about $3300. Three suspects were charged with multiple counts of possession with the intent to distribute. (Photo courtesy Anne Arundel County police)
The Anne Arundel County police seized 45 bags of heroin (a total of more than 15 grams) and 71 strips of 8 mg Suboxone in Glen Burnie in January 2016. About $560 in cash was also recovered. The drugs have a street value of about $3,300. Three suspects were charged with multiple counts of possession with the intent to distribute. (Photo courtesy Anne Arundel County Police Department)
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Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (left) announced he is seeking $5.3 million to provide medication-assisted treatment and to purchase thousands of doses of naloxone, an overdose-reversal medication. Following the recommendation from the state’s Heroin and Opioid Emergency Task Force, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced that $3 million in state grants would be used to fight the epidemic. (WTOP collage via AP)
“We’ve not done the right thing so far. Everyone knows it’s a problem. We don’t need billboards. We don’t need PSAs. We don’t need task forces,” said Mike Gimbel, former Baltimore County drug czar. “We need treatment.” (WTOP/Jamie Forzato)
Every suspected heroin addict that is arrested in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, receives a letter from Police Chief Tim Altomare, pleading with them to let the department help them on the road to recovery. (Courtesy Anne Arundel County police)
More than 3 grams of crack cocaine, nearly 1 gram of heroin, and a loaded revolver handgun was seized during a February 2015 traffic stop in Glen Burnie. Anne Arundel County Police arrested the two suspects. (Photo courtesy Anne Arundel County police)
Anne Arundel County Police seized 45 bags of heroin (a total of more than 15 grams) and 71 strips of 8mg Suboxone in Glen Burnie in January 2016. About $560 in cash was also recovered. The drugs have a street value of about $3300. Three suspects were charged with multiple counts of possession with the intent to distribute. (Photo courtesy Anne Arundel County police)

This final story in WTOP’s series, Hooked on Heroin: Deadlier than ever, looks ahead to this year’s legislative session and discusses what lawmakers are prepared to do to turn the tide of this heroin crisis.

HANOVER, Md. – The state of Maryland is failing at providing effective opioid abuse treatment, said Mike Gimbel, former Baltimore County drug czar.

“We’ve not done the right thing so far. Everyone knows it’s a problem. We don’t need billboards. We don’t need PSAs. We don’t need task forces,” Gimbel said. “We need treatment.”

Top politicians, including President Barack Obama, agree.

Maryland and Virginia lawmakers are offering proposals to expand access to treatment programs in their states.

Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe announced he is seeking more than $31 million to strengthen the state’s mental health system, including $5.3 million to provide medication-assisted treatment and to buy thousands of doses of naloxone, an overdose-reversal medication.

The legislative reforms he introduced will limit opioid prescriptions written in emergency departments to three days. He also supports allowing state-certified REVIVE! trainers to distribute naloxone during free training classes, and the expansion of drug court eligibility to include people convicted of violent crimes.

Maryland Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford told WTOP he expects treatment access to be a priority during the General Assembly session.

“There needs to be an emphasis on care, particularly quality of care,” he said, but he didn’t offer specifics. Gov. Larry Hogan has not released a budget yet.

The Washington Post has reported that other bills expected to be introduced include a measure to keep treatment centers open and mandating treatment for anyone who is revived with naloxone.

But there has been an institutional reluctance for states to dedicate taxpayer money to affordable drug treatment centers.

Following the recommendation from the state’s Heroin and Opioid Emergency Task Force, Hogan announced in August that $3 million in state grants would be used to fight the epidemic. The money was allocated to help police track down violent offenders and heroin coordinators to collect data about overdoses. But none of the money went to in-patient treatment centers.

Though the D.C. Council enacted a law, currently under congressional review, expanding access to naloxone, no current bills address treatment.

As state lawmakers grapple with how to address the epidemic, police departments are filling in the gaps with a new treatment-centered attitude. Where lawmakers fail to agree, officers are pulling together to provide in-person resources on the ground every day.

 

On the front lines

Over the last couple of years, law enforcement agencies have changed their perception about how to best tackle the opioid epidemic. Officials now say they can’t “arrest their way” out of this crisis and are taking a more holistic approach.

“It’s not like Hollywood,” said Second Lt. James Cox III, a supervisor for the Fairfax County, Virginia, Police Department’s organized crime and narcotics division. “Detectives are putting in 14-, 15-, 16-hour days, killing themselves trying to get this drug off the street.”

Every suspected heroin addict arrested in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, receives a letter from Police Chief Tim Altomare, pleading with them to let the department help them on the road to recovery.

“Drug treatment can work. People recover from addiction every day. WE BELIEVE YOU CAN DO IT BUT WE CAN’T DO IT FOR YOU,” the letter reads.

But letters and outreach can only go so far. And Altomare said the state needs massive increases in treatment funding.

“There aren’t enough treatment beds in the state. That goes hand-in-hand with the treatment beds for mental disorders. About 85 percent of people fighting addiction have a co-occurring emotional health disorder like bipolar disorder or paranoid schizophrenia,” Altomare said.

Montgomery County State’s Attorney John McCarthy puts some of the responsibility for inadequate treatment squarely on the shoulders of insurance companies. He would like the legislature to rewrite insurance regulations to mandate more coverage.

“You need about 18 months of profound treatment to get away from the psychological control of the drug and really beat the addiction. The reality is that we put young people into treatment and it’s just not sufficient,” he said.

In early 2015, Cox and two Fairfax County detectives tried to tackle this crisis in a unique way. They formed a partnership with the Community Services Board to create an informational packet full of addiction recovery resources. The goal was to dispatch a detective to the scene of every heroin overdose and distribute those packets.

But it didn’t work as planned. Out of about 100 overdose cases, Cox said he only knows of one person who sought help. With only two detectives on this task force — and because most overdoses occur between midnight and 4 a.m. — Cox had to make the difficult decision to cut back.

“If an addict doesn’t want help, they’re not going to get help,” he said.

Instead, Cox’s latest initiative is working to create a Recovery Call List – a resource for people apprehensive about interacting with the police. On-call civilian volunteers who are currently in recovery would immediately respond to the scene of an overdose.

“So at 2 o’clock in the morning, when someone is admitted to Fairfax Hospital for a heroin overdose, a person on this list can reach out and say: ‘Hey. I’ve been there. I’ve done that. This is where you can be right now,’” he said.

Cox’s team recently arrested a pregnant woman on heroin charges. But instead of taking her to jail that night, they coordinated with the Community Services Board to get her into rehab as she waits for trial.

“She needs to beat the drug first, and then we’ll deal with her in the criminal justice system later. First thing we need to do is keep her alive and get her help,” Cox said.

 

An intellectual solution to a psychological problem

Lawmakers will spend several months hashing out how they want to shape their states’ policies on addiction prevention and treatment. But critics say they’re not focusing on the right ideas.

“They don’t understand what drives the addict,” Mike Gimbel said.

In the past two years, failed proposals in Maryland included measures that would provide drug users with clean needles and allow them to get high in hospitals or similar “safe-injection sites.”

Gimbel called these “intellectual pipe dreams” that aren’t based in reality.

“Nothing gets to the root cause of addiction. When I was doing heroin, I didn’t care if I lived or died. I didn’t care about police. I didn’t care about going to jail. I didn’t care about overdose. I didn’t care about using a clean or dirty needle.”

Gimbel went from shooting heroin every day in high school to becoming the director of Baltimore County’s Bureau of Substance Abuse.

When he hit rock bottom, he enrolled in a long-term drug-free treatment facility in California. A few months ago, he celebrated his 44th year of sobriety.

“I’d be dead today if I didn’t have a place to go,” he said.  “We have to get to the inner soul of the person. The work we need to do is on the mental and spiritual side.”

 

Prison time

As states consider expanding treatment-focused programs for drug users, police are also pushing lawmakers to consider increasing prison sentences for drug dealers.

In October 2015, Anne Arundel County detectives captured the biggest heroin distribution ring in county history after an eight-month, multi-agency investigation. Nearly $1 million in assets were seized, including three kilograms of heroin, 1.5 kilograms of cocaine and 12 firearms.

The drug kingpin was sentenced to 25 years in prison, and the bust made a big dent in the area’s drug trafficking, but officials knew that void would be filled by new dealers who wanted to infiltrate the market.

In Montgomery County, after one particularly deadly week, State’s Attorney John McCarthy and Maryland Del. Kathleen Dumais drafted legislation in 2015 aimed at cracking down on dealers who sold drugs that caused a fatal overdose.

The bill would have allowed judges to sentence such dealers to prison for up to 30 years, and it had widespread support among the law enforcement community. But it wasn’t brought to a vote on the House floor.

“There was a sense that it would unduly affect African-Americans or other minorities in Baltimore City,” Dumais said.

A similar bill in Virginia, which would have increased the maximum penalty to 40 years, also failed that year.

Law enforcement officials urge politicians to reconsider bringing these measures up for a vote this year.

“If it leads to death, we should be able to charge them with homicide,” Cox said.

“I’d like to see a mandatory 20-year sentence,” Altomare said. “There’s nothing non-violent about a heroin dealer who is selling death in the community.”

While lawmakers slog through committee hearings, arguing about language and scrounging for money, the body count rises.

Altomare recalled one weekend last year when three people fatally overdosed in a 24-hour period.

“It really crushed us,” he said. “On Monday mornings, we dread seeing on paper how many overdoses we’ve had. Some Mondays, we’re reeling.”

 

Read all five parts of this series.

Hooked on Heroin: Park 9 — What are lawmakers prepared to do? (WTOP'S JAMIE FORZATO REPORTS)
Hooked on Heroin: Part 10 — Police 'can't arrest their way' out of the crisis (WTOP'S JAMIE FORZATO REPORTS)
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