Washington, D.C. — Today, Regina LaBelle, Acting Director of National Drug Control Policy, announced the Biden-Harris Administration’s Drug Policy Priorities for the Administration’s first year. The seven priorities propose specific and targeted actions to reduce overdoses and promote recovery, including expanding access to quality treatment, reducing an increasingly lethal supply of illicit substances, and enhancing harm reduction services that engage and build trust with people who use drugs (PWUD), among others. These actions are critical at a moment when the latest provisional data from the CDC shows that 88,000 people died of an overdose in the 12-month period ending in August 2020*, a 26.8% increase, year-over-year. The implementation of these priorities will complement President Biden’s tireless efforts to give American families the tools they need to build back better.
President Biden has made clear that addressing the overdose and addiction epidemic is an urgent priority for his administration. The American Rescue Plan, which President Biden signed into law in March 2021, appropriated nearly $4 billion to enable the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the Health Resources and Services Administration to expand access to vital behavioral health services. The release of these priorities will serve as guideposts to ensure that the Federal government promotes evidence-based public health and public safety actions, with a pointed focus on racial equity in drug policy.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the addiction and overdose epidemic, leaving many families and communities hurting,” said Regina LaBelle, Acting Director of National Drug Control Policy. “These priorities lay out the aggressive, evidence-based, whole-of-government response that we need to implement in the first year of this Administration in order to bend the curve. ”
The seven Biden-Harris Administration drug policy priorities for the first year are:
In particular, the focus on harm reduction and racial equity confronts longstanding challenges with ensuring equitable treatment in the healthcare and criminal justice systems, building trust with PWUD, and breaking the stigma of addiction that prevents people from accessing lifesaving services. ONDCP intends to work closely with agencies and Congress to meet these priorities.
By statute, this statement of policy priorities is due to Congress by April 1 in the year of a presidential inauguration, and it takes the place of a full National Drug Control Strategy. To read the document, click here.