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The Opioid Crisis: What Democratic Gubernatorial Candidates Say They'll Do To Fight It

Jo Ingles
L-R From top left and clockwise Joe Schiavoni, Richard Cordray, Bill O’Neill, Dennis Kucinich ";

As the primary comes closer, the four Democratic men who would like to be Ohio’s next governor are talking up their different ideas for tackling the state’s opioid crisis. 

If you ask state Sen. Joe Schiavoni about how to stem the rising tide of opioid deaths in Ohio, he’ll tell you he’s been pushing a proposal to deal with that.

“I’ve had a bill out for a little under a year. It’s actually been proposed in the senate to allocate 10% of the rainy day fund to deal with education for kids, making sure that police have the tools to do their job and rehabilitation and reconnecting families on the back end of the addiction. And so it’s a $200 million over two years in order to reach all of those goals,” Schiavoni says.

Schiavoni says he thinks local communities need to be empowered to help with the problem on the front lines.

“If we are getting people to rehabilitation, after 30 days if they are coming out and there’s no wrap around service for them, there’s no way for them to sustain their sobriety and they are really, really struggling so it’s about giving those locals the tools necessary to deal with it,” Schiavoni explains.

That’s a point on which former Ohio Attorney General and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Chief Richard Cordray agrees.

“State government can be much more effective if it partners with local governments, listens to local governments, gets them the resources they need and make sure the state government is pulling its weight on this problem just as much as local governments that have been largely on their own,” Cordray says.

Cordray unveiled his plan alongside Columbus city officials, noting the state has cut money for local governments in recent years. And he says that’s a problem because the solution has to include everyone.

“This is an all hands on deck problem and it has to be law enforcement and the people who are experts in mental health and drug addiction and it has to be everybody in the community that is affected by this – all coming together to solve it,” Cordray says.

Former Ohio Supreme Court Justice Bill O’Neill says the state needs to focus on helping opioid addicts get into treatment. He says that starts with dealing with the shortage of treatment beds.

“We have to reopen the statewide mental health network with regional hospitals. Otherwise we have to accept we are going to lose 5000 people a year….and more. It’s going up at the rate of 1000 a year, by the way,” O'Neill says.

O’Neill says there’s another key ingredient – legalized marijuana.

“If you legalize marijuana, the Colorado experiment has shown the use of heroin goes down 25%, the deaths from heroin goes down 25% and we generate $500 million in new sales taxes for marijuana sales,” O'Neill explains.

That’s a point on which former Congressman and former Cleveland mayor Dennis Kucinich agrees.

“The state’s made a mess of the medical marijuana program that the people of Ohio intended for people to have options in pain management. I have talked to people who have used marijuana for their pain management and they have told me that they were able to get off opioids. We have to look at that,” Kucinich says.

Kucinich says he has a comprehensive program for more treatment of all kinds, including holistic remedies. And he says the state needs to give Ohioans better and more affordable health care options in general.

“There’s a lot of money being spent in healthcare but when it’s for profit, a big chunk of that money is going for corporate profits, stock options, executive salaries, advertising, marketing, the cost of paperwork. I’m about to roll out the particulars of a health care plan that will address comprehensive health but it also involves involving individuals in their own care,” Kucinich explains.

Kucinich, who pushed a “Medicare-for-all” plan when he was in Congress, isn’t giving details of his plan yet.

A new report from the Centers for Disease Control says opioid overdoses soared nearly 30 percent last year, killing an estimated 14 Ohioans a day. And while any solution to the crisis is expensive, a report from Ohio State says the crisis is costing Ohio nearly $9 billion a year.

Contact Jo Ingles at jingles@statehousenews.org.
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