Friday, August 19, 2016

Troops On The Boarder Protecting Us From Massachusett Heroin?

 Wonderful and current reference information on the epidemic

NH1 News Investigates: Taking back NH from the drug crisis
Lawrence and Holyoke Ma is where 90% of the heroin comes from in the Surrounding Hinsdale area.


By Joshua Miller Globe Staff  August 19, 2016

American politicians often campaign with promises to send troops to the Mexican border.
Donald Trump has, infamously, called for building “a great wall” and making Mexico pay for it.
But now Jeanie Forrester, a New Hampshire state senator and gubernatorial candidate, has a different kind of idea: troops to protect the Granite State from drug dealers from Massachusetts.
Aiming to fight the scourge of opioid abuse and staunch the flow of heroin, Forrester said she would consider deploying the New Hampshire National Guard to patrol the state’s southern border with Massachusetts, according to the Concord Monitor newspaper.
Mike Dennehy, a senior strategist for the campaign, told the Globe Forrester wasn’t available to chat Friday. He said her original idea was to deploy the New Hampshire Guard, with other states and federal approval, to the Texas-Mexico border.
But he said Forrester wouldn’t hesitate to use the National Guard to support law enforcement in their interdiction efforts with drugs coming in from other states.
Jeanie Forrester, a New Hampshire state senator and gubernatorial candidate.
“The bottom line is that Jeanie takes this issue very seriously and is thinking outside the box,” he said. “The same old politicians coming up with failed ideas that
Yep, same old response from politicians for a unprecedented crisis. NH is the hot bet of heroin nationwide. Did I hear it right, if the NH rate was the same nation wide we would have a death rate of 100,000 a year.
aren’t working won’t cut it, especially in Manchester where they are overwhelmed. The drug issue in New Hampshire is a crisis and needs to be treated like a crisis. And she will be the governor who begins the rollback and end to our present drug crisis.”
But one of Forrester’s top opponents for the GOP nomination for governor brushed aside the idea of sending troops to the border with Massachusetts.
“I don’t think that’s a well thought-out plan,” said Ted Gatsas, the mayor of Manchester, the state’s biggest city. “Putting National Guardsmen on the border — are you going to stop every car coming from Massachusetts? It just doesn’t make sense.”
Gatsas said he’s tough on drug dealers, proposing increasing penalties. But he also supports other approaches, such as instituting a seven-day initial prescription limit on opioids, similar to a law passed this year in Massachusetts.
So what does Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker think of the idea of a neighboring state’s chief executive deploying troops to the common border to protect the Granite State from opioids?
Baker spokesman Brendan C. Moss wouldn’t say. But in a statement Moss noted that Baker recently led a group of almost 50 governors in signing a compact about fighting opioid addiction, “calling for a coordinated approach between states to combat the opioid epidemic, including collaboration with law enforcement to end opioid trafficking.”
A spirited campaign for governor is underway in New Hampshire, which elects its chief executive every two years. Governor Maggie Hassan, a Democrat, is running for US Senate so the gubernatorial race is for an open seat and has drawn several Republican and Democratic candidates.
The primary is Sept. 13.
Joshua Miller can be reached at joshua.miller@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @jm_bos and subscribe to his weekday e-mail update on politics at bostonglobe.com/politicalhappyhour

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