WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. House of
Representatives passed the
Methamphetamine
Response Act – a bill originally
introduced by Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), ranking member of the Judiciary
Committee, and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) that directs the Office of National
Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) to implement a plan to address the rising use of
methamphetamine. Their proposal, which
passed
the Senate in December with bipartisan support, now heads to the president’s
desk.
“After working on this critical issue for
the last few years, I’m glad our Methamphetamine Response Act has passed
both the House and Senate with strong bipartisan support. Meth has taken lives
and destroyed families across America – particularly in the Midwest. Though
this drug is not new, traffickers are finding new and harmful ways to increase
meth’s potency and distribution, spiking overdose rates. By declaring meth an
emerging drug threat, our bill helps law enforcement better respond to the
challenges presented by drug traffickers’ evolving tactics, and it urges our
federal partners to continue prioritizing a response and strategy to address
the meth crisis. I urge President Biden to sign this legislation into law
immediately,” Grassley said.
“A recent study by the National
Institutes of Health found that methamphetamine-related overdose deaths nearly
tripled from 2015-2019. By designating this dangerous drug as an emerging
threat, we’ll be able to better address this problem with a whole-of-government
approach,” Feinstein said.
Specifically, the Methamphetamine Response Act will:
- Declare
methamphetamine as an emerging drug threat.
- Require ONDCP to
develop, implement and make public, within 90 days of enactment, a national
emerging threats response plan that is specific to methamphetamine.
- Require ONDCP’s
plan to be updated annually and include the following:
- An assessment of the methamphetamine threat,
including current availability and demand for the drug;
- An assessment of evidence-based prevention and
treatment programs, as well as law enforcement programs;
- Short- and long-term goals, including those
focused on supply and demand reduction and on expanding the availability and
effectiveness of treatment and prevention programs;
- Performance measures pertaining to the plan’s
goals;
- The level of funding needed to implement the
plan; and
- An implementation strategy, goals and objectives
for a media campaign.
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