‘NOT GIVEN THE TIME IT NEEDED’ — Public health advocates fear the repeal of an Oregon law decriminalizing drug possession will end the nation’s first experiment in treating addiction to hard drugs as a public health problem, POLITICO’s Carmen Paun and Aitor Hernández-Morales report. How we got here: The Oregon legislature has voted to repeal a law decriminalizing drug possession for personal use, joining other cities in adopting new tough-on-drugs policies. Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek is expected to sign the measure, passed after a surge in fatal overdoses and public drug use, in the coming days. But public health supporters of the law say the repeal comes before decriminalization had a chance to work. They point to Portugal, which saw a 75 percent drop in drug deaths since adopting the same strategy in 2001 through 2022, as evidence that Oregon is giving up too early. Oregon’s experiment “was not given the time that it needed,” said Tera Hurst, executive director of Oregon’s Health Justice Recovery Alliance. How Portugal succeeded: In response to sky-high overdose rates in the late 1990s, Portugal’s parliament decriminalized drugs in 2000. In 2001, it reoriented the country's response to the opioid crisis by reframing it as a public health crisis — and not a crime. João Goulão, the Portugal official who’s overseen the drug treatment system since its implementation, told POLITICO the Oregon legislature’s decision seemed premature. “When you’re taking on something as complex as the opioid crisis, you can’t really expect to see dramatic changes from one day to the next,” he said. Hurst and other decriminalization advocates said the Oregon law didn’t succeed because of implementation problems: a failure to fund new treatment services for 18 months after the law passed, a failure to train police for their new role in addressing addiction and a failure to direct drug users to treatment. Proponents of the repeal, which will allow police to make arrests for drug possession while offering options to avoid jail by seeking treatment, said they aren’t abandoning a public health-led approach. Instead, they’re pursuing the needed fixes. “… [W]e needed to make sure that it wasn’t just easy to be a drug addict on the streets of Portland,” said Kate Lieber, a Democrat who’s the majority leader in the Oregon State Senate. “We couldn’t do that without recriminalization.” WELCOME TO THURSDAY PULSE. Starting next week, D.C.’s public libraries will begin offering free eclipse glasses so you can safely view April 8’s solar eclipse. Send your tips, scoops and feedback to ccirruzzo@politico.com and bleonard@politico.com and follow along @ChelseaCirruzzo and @_BenLeonard_.
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