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Channeling grief into unwavering advocacy

In November, Corinne Kaufman lost her beautiful granddaughter Paige Gibbons to an accidental fentanyl overdose just four days after her 19th birthday.

According to Gibbon’s grandmother, Gibbons and her two friends were not drug addicts. They bought what they thought were Percocet to relax them. Gibbons and one of her friends took a small nibble out of a tablet. Gibbons died. Her friend endured a prolonged stay in intensive care where she suffered two strokes.

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“My granddaughter Paige was all about life!” Kaufman said. “This demon drug knows no boundaries. it is taking people from all walks of life.”

Most of the fentanyl that is being sold in the United States is massproduced in Mexico using chemicals primarily from China before being pressed into pills or mixed with other counterfeit pills made to look like Xanax, Adderall or oxycodone.

Kaufman has channeled some of her grief into launching “Families Against Fentanyl,” which advocates for getting Narcan opiate overdose reversal kits into middle and high school nurses’ offices and making fentanyl test strips readily available.

Nassau County Legislator Delia DeRiggi-Whitton (D-Glen Cove) and fellow Legislative Minority member Arnold Drucker (D-Plainview) and Debra Mulé (D-Freeport) introduced Nassau County’s “Families Against Fentanyl” law. The measure, which was first filed in May 2022, would require Nassau to include fentanyldetecting test strips in every Narcan kit it distributes for the Department of Mental Health, Chemical Dependency and Developmental Disabilities to makes strips available to residents upon request.

Unfortunately, the Legislative Majority has not yet called a hearing on the bill.

“This terrible scourge is claiming the lives of far too many people – many of whom are not drug addicts,” DeRiggi-Whitton said. “We need to keep fentanyl away from our children and out of the country as

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