Senator McConnell played a key role in securing the highest level of funding ever devoted to combating the opioid crisis.
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) announced on Wednesday, September 19, 2018 that, as a result of an agreement he brokered, community health centers in the Commonwealth of Kentucky will receive nearly $5.6 million from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The funding will be used to support HHS’s Five-Point Opioid Strategy nationwide.
The funding was approved by Congress earlier this year, and Senator McConnell played a key role in securing $4.6 billion to continue combating this pressing crisis. That’s the highest level of funding ever devoted to fighting the opioid crisis.
“I want to thank the Trump administration for working with me to provide critical resources to Kentucky to help combat the opioid epidemic. The bipartisan funding agreement I negotiated earlier this year will provide the necessary funds to bolster our ongoing national struggle against opioid addiction and substance abuse. It will fund new grants, prevention and treatment programs, and law enforcement efforts in vulnerable communities across our Commonwealth,” said Senator McConnell.
The following Community Health Centers in Kentucky were awarded funding:
|
Owensboro |
$249,942 |
|
Prestonsburg |
$285,000 |
|
Greenville |
$175,313 |
|
Burkesville |
$285,500 |
|
Richmond |
$305,420 |
|
Louisville |
$285,000 |
|
Corbin |
$285,000 |
|
McKee |
$285,000 |
|
Lexington |
$285,000 |
|
Beattyville |
$285,000 |
|
Hazard |
$285,000 |
|
Richmond |
$285,000 |
|
Vanceburg |
$285,000 |
|
Prestonsburg |
$285,000 |
|
Whitesburg |
$293,538 |
|
Princeton |
$285,000 |
|
Providence |
$285,000 |
|
Louisville |
$285,000 |
|
Mount Sterling |
$294,250 |
|
Warsaw |
$285,000 |
Wednesday’s announcement builds on Congress’s ongoing efforts and will help deliver more relief to the millions of Americans who continue to battle addiction, including thousands in Kentucky. On Monday, the U.S. Senate passed landmark opioid legislation, The Opioid Crisis Response Act of 2018, which contains provisions from two bills sponsored by Senator McConnell. The first is the Comprehensive Addiction Recovery through Effective Employment and Reentry (CAREER) Act, which expands grants and targets funding for treatment, transitional housing, and job training and placement services to help individuals in recovery find their footing and maintain their sobriety. The second is the Protecting Moms and Infants Act, which will refine our federal efforts to combat the effects of opioids on expecting mothers and their unborn children.
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