Fall 2017 County Lines

Page 11

AAC

FROM THE GOVERNOR

Opioid epidemic: a national health emergency

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n the nearly 20 years since I became director of the Drug Enforcement Administration, the illegal use of prescription drugs has become an epidemic that our nation couldn’t have imagined. Drug addiction is an insidious enemy of our families and our nation. Addiction to opioids is the biggest challenge we face. An addiction often begins as a legitimate use of a prescription to block pain after an injury or surgery. Addiction slips up on people who would never have considered abusing medicine. On Thursday, Oct. 26, President Trump declared the opioid epidemic a national health emergency in the United States, where about 175 people a day overdose on an opioid. Nationally, the number of overdose deaths by prescription opioids has quadrupled since 1999. In Arkansas, we already are addressing the threat. This year, our legislators passed a law that allows pharmacists to dispense naloxone without a prescription. Naloxone is an antidote for an opioid overdose. Some of our first responders have saved lives because they were carrying the drug. We have established a statewide protocol for tracking the prescribing and dispensing of opioids. Law enforcement agencies can watch for trends and anticipate problems. We’ve also established drug courts, which allow judges the flexibility to offer drug offenders court-supervised treatment and other assistance instead of sentencing them to prison. But let me bring this to a personal level. It’s the real-life stories that drive home the heartache. Linda Lary spent much of her childhood in North Little Rock, and her mother was a native of Waldo. Linda now lives in Greenwood, Mississippi. Her son Michael was an All-State football lineman in high school and an Eagle Scout by age 15. He was a member of the

From The

Phi Delta Theta fraternity at Ole Governor Miss. He was one hour short of graduation with a degree in exercise physiology. Michael’s slide into addiction began seven years ago with 60 Percocet pills a doctor prescribed after he developed meningitis. He was in and out of rehab. Shortly before he died, he admitted to his parents that he was addicted to heroin. He died Hon. ASA sometime after 5 p.m. on Dec. 19, HuTCHINSON two days before his 28th birthday. Governor of Arkansas His Bible and a dose of Narcan [the antidote naloxone] were on the floor beside him. Linda is moving from grief to action. As she has spoken out, parents have been calling her for comfort and with the names of drug dealers, which she passes to local law enforcement agents. She is a forceful advocate for the things she believes addicts need: Year-long rehab centers and sober-living houses; strict monitoring of drug testing with an observer; and intensive outpatient therapy. To win this fight against drug abuse, we must pay attention to how and where we prescribe opioids.

Asa Hutchinson The Honorable Asa Hutchinson Governor of Arkansas

Governor announces state’s Naloxone Standing Protocol Gov. Asa Hutchinson, with DHS State Director of Drug Prevention Kirk Lane and other officials, announced on Sept. 6 the creation of the state’s Naloxone Standing Protocol. The protocol was developed pursuant to Act 284 of 2017 by state Sens. Cecile Bledsoe and Lance Eads and Rep. Justin Boyd. It allows licensed pharmacists in Arkansas to order, dispense and/ or administer naloxone without a prescription as therapy, providing greater access to more Arkansans and first responders in the event of a drug overdose. Naloxone is an opioid antagonist delivered via injection or nasal spray that is used to block or reverse an opioid overdose. “The effects of opioid addiction — on individuals, families, and our state — are staggering,” said Hutchinson. “Reports of drugrelated injuries and deaths across the nation are increasing, and sadly, we’ve seen the tragic effects of this epidemic on the communities in our state, as well. — Photo by Holland Doran COUNTY LINES, FALL 2017

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Articles inside

AAC Staff Profile: Mary Edwards

2min
pages 52-53

Treasurers meet in Logan County

1min
page 51

Judges hold Fall meeting in Sebastian County

1min
page 50

Logan County hosts county clerks

1min
page 49

Roads seminar covers payment assessment, road solutions

1min
page 46

More than 100 gather for jail law seminar

1min
page 48

Circuit clerks talk e-filing, swear in slate of officers

1min
page 47

AAC seminar focuses on public speaking

1min
page 45

Assessors elect new executive board

1min
page 43

Coroners cover crime scene photography

1min
page 44

Reconstruction of courthouse facade was ’tricky’

3min
page 42

Bradley County Courthouse towers above

3min
pages 40-41

AAC Board Profile: Saline County Coroner Kevin Cleghorn

3min
page 36

AAC Profile: Sheriffs’ Association Director Scott Bradley

5min
pages 38-39

AAC Board Profile: Stone County Assessor Heather Stevens

3min
page 37

Over 100 counties lining up to sue big pharma

7min
pages 34-35

President’s opioid commission issues recommendations

2min
page 33

President declares a public health emergency

2min
page 32

Arkansas at front line of U.S. opioid epidemic

7min
pages 30-31

AAC forms Opioid Task Force

4min
pages 28-29

The Opioid Epidemic in Arkansas

1min
page 27

Counties receive Digital Transformation Awards

7min
pages 24-26

Savings Times 2

3min
pages 22-23

Attorney General Opinions

4min
pages 12-13

Seems to Me

10min
pages 19-21

Governmental Affairs

4min
page 17

Research Corner

10min
pages 14-16

Legal Corner

4min
page 18

From the Director’s Desk

8min
pages 7-8

From the Governor

3min
page 11

President’s Perspective

4min
pages 9-10
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Fall 2017 County Lines by associationofarkansascounties - Issuu