White House makes last-ditch plea for opioid funding
The Obama administration is pressing GOP leaders to devote more funding to the fight against addiction before Congress sends its major opioids bill to the president’s desk this summer.
The head of the White House’s drug policy office, Michael Botticelli, joined Management and Budget Director Shaun Donovan in a call to action Friday to approve a fully funded opioids bill — an approach that was backed by a majority of senators on the floor this week.
{mosads}“Congress has been voting on various pieces of legislation related to the opioid epidemic, but so far has not provided the resources needed to make treatment available to everyone who wants it,” Botticelli and Donovan wrote in a blog post published Friday afternoon.
The message from the White House came one day after the Senate voted to begin talks with the House to merge the two, mostly bipartisan opioid bills.
The same day, a majority of the Senate, 66 lawmakers, voted to support an earlier version of the bill that included funding. That move helps ensure that the issue of funding remains part of negotiations even though most of the Republicans appointed to the conference committee don’t agree with it.
Among the five Senate Republicans put on the committee, three — including the No. 2-ranking senator, John Cornyn (Texas) — said they’d oppose funding in the bill.
From the start, Democrats — as well as some vulnerable GOP senators such as Rob Portman (Ohio) — have demanded more funding to help local health officials deal with a mounting death toll from opioid overdoses.
Most Republicans, however, have argued that more money wouldn’t solve the problem until more is known about how best to fight the epidemic. Several pieces of the GOP bills call for more studies into “best practices” nationwide.
House and Senate GOP leaders have touted their efforts on opioids as a top priority ahead of the fall general election, though the intraparty spat over funding has stalled the bills for months.
Several vulnerable GOP lawmakers joined the Democrats in calling for funding, including Sens. Portman, Mark Kirk (Ill.), Pat Toomey (Pa.) and Kelly Ayotte (N.H.).
The list also included several Republicans from states hit harder by the opioid crisis, such as Iowa, West Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia.
The five Republicans on the committee are Chuck Grassley (Iowa), Lamar Alexander (Tenn.), Orrin Hatch (Utah), and Jeff Sessions (Ala.).
The Democrats are Sen. Patrick Leahy (Vt.), Patty Murray (Wash.) and Ron Wyden (Ore.).
Senate Democratic leaders say they already have proof that opioid funding is a bipartisan issue.
Murray has called attention to her recent efforts with Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) on the health subpanel of the Senate Appropriations Committee to approve the first bipartisan spending bill in seven years. That bill included a $126 million increase in opioids-related programs over last year’s total.
Democrats have called for at least $600 million in emergency funding to halt the epidemic.
Deaths from opioid drug overdoses hit an all-time record in the U.S. last year, rising 14 percent.
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