File #: 23-5429    Version: 1 Name: Deadly Fentanyl Epidemic Resolution
Type: Resolution Status: Held / Deferred in Committee
File created: 10/17/2023 In control: Legislation and Intergovernmental Relations Committee
On agenda: 10/19/2023 Final action:
Title: PROPOSED RESOLUTION A RESOLUTION TO ADDRESS THE DEADLY FENTANYL EPIDEMIC WHEREAS, drug overdose or poisoning is the leading cause of death for Americans aged 18-45; and WHEREAS, nearly 70% of those deaths are due to Opioids, including Fentanyl; and WHEREAS, Fentanyl is up to 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than Morphine; and WHEREAS, more than 91% of Opioid overdose deaths involved Fentanyl; and WHEREAS, the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office has confirmed 2,000 Opioid overdose deaths for 2022, breaking the previous record of 1,935 set in 2021; and WHEREAS, Cook County has had two consecutive years of record high Opioid/Fentanyl overdose deaths; and WHEREAS, just over 70% of the overdose deaths were in Chicago; and WHEREAS, approximately 78% of the Opioid overdose deaths are male, African Americans make up 56% of the deaths, Latinos account for just under 15% and whites constitute 29% of the deaths; and WHEREAS, these numbers and statistic...
Sponsors: SEAN M. MORRISON

title

PROPOSED RESOLUTION

 

A RESOLUTION TO ADDRESS THE DEADLY FENTANYL EPIDEMIC

 

WHEREAS, drug overdose or poisoning is the leading cause of death for Americans aged 18-45; and

 

WHEREAS, nearly 70% of those deaths are due to Opioids, including Fentanyl; and

 

WHEREAS, Fentanyl is up to 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than Morphine; and

 

WHEREAS, more than 91% of Opioid overdose deaths involved Fentanyl; and

 

WHEREAS, the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office has confirmed 2,000 Opioid overdose deaths for 2022, breaking the previous record of 1,935 set in 2021; and

 

WHEREAS, Cook County has had two consecutive years of record high Opioid/Fentanyl overdose deaths; and

 

WHEREAS, just over 70% of the overdose deaths were in Chicago; and

 

WHEREAS, approximately 78% of the Opioid overdose deaths are male, African Americans make up 56% of the deaths, Latinos account for just under 15% and whites constitute 29% of the deaths; and

 

WHEREAS, these numbers and statistics are staggering and alarming for countless residents in Cook County and beyond; and

 

WHEREAS, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) says that the majority of Fentanyl is sourced from China and trafficked into the U.S. by the Mexican Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels; and

 

WHEREAS, the current federal border policy ignores and underestimates the impact of the Fentanyl epidemic on the front line; and

 

WHEREAS, the DEA says it seized enough deadly Fentanyl in 2022 to kill every American multiple times over; and

 

WHEREAS, the federal government must tighten the entry points at our borders and crack down on the external producers of this deadly drug; and

 

WHEREAS, many of Illinois’ elected leaders reduced criminal charges for Fentanyl through the passage of the state’s Safe-T Act; and

 

WHEREAS, current policies are failing as illustrated by the heartbreaking statistics and data. Opioid/Fentanyl death counts will tragically continue to grow without a new rational course of action; and

 

WHEREAS, if Illinois wants to save lives, then it must reverse course and strengthen its laws against the illegal distribution and sale of Fentanyl; and

 

WHEREAS, on the local level, we must expand access to comprehensive drug treatment to end this deadly cycle of abuse that is devastating our communities.

 

THERFORE BE IT RESOLVED, the time to tackle this deadly epidemic head on is now. The Cook County Board of Commissioners calls for immediate action to be taken by the federal government to properly secure the border to stop the illegal flow of fentanyl into the United States of America.

 

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, copies of this resolution be distributed to Senator Richard Durbin, Senator Tammy Duckworth and the entire Illinois Congressional Delegation, and call upon them to demand President Biden and his administration seek an immediate securing of the U.S. border to stem the dangerous and tragic overflow of Fentanyl into the United States of America.

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