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Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Fentanyl Rapidly Becoming More Common in Ariz.

'Failure to complete physical barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border... has enabled sufficient flow of fentanyl into the United States...'

(Tom Joyce, The Center Square) Opioids, including fentanyl, are becoming a bigger problem in Ariz.

Synthetic opioid-related overdoses killed more than 71,000 Americans in 2021 — about three-quarters of all overdose deaths, according to Common Sense Institute Arizona. And fentanyl continues to plague the state.

Fentanyl causes the majority (57%) of the state’s drug overdoses, up from just 4% in 2017. Meanwhile, prescription opioids are only involved in just 36% of cases.

Common Sense Institute Arizona found that the fentanyl crisis results in $53 billion in economic costs for Ariz. This cost includes substance abuse treatment, law enforcement, health care and reduced productivity.

The report found that law enforcement encounters with fentanyl are sharply rising. It said Ariz.’s Department of Public Safety is on pace to seize 1,800 pounds of fentanyl this year, including 656 pounds in border counties alone. Meanwhile, the department seized 239 pounds worth throughout the state in 2020.

Meanwhile, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol has been seizing fewer drugs at the border despite the increased flow. Border Patrol agents seized 5,500 pounds of illegal drugs in Ariz. in 2020 [excluding marijuana] but are on pace to seize fewer than 3,000 pounds this year.

“Federal border officials have been forced to reallocate scarce resources to the interdiction and processing of migrants since 2020,” Common Sense Institute Arizona wrote in its report.

“Failure to complete physical barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border, combined with a lack of enforcement attention, has enabled sufficient flow of fentanyl into the United States to fill a demand shift created in part by the crackdown on mail-order and prescription drugs.”

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