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Christie Details His New Plan To Combat Opioid Crisis

Governor Chris Christie

Governor Chris Christie is detailing his plan to shift $200 million from New Jersey's budget for new initiatives to combat the opioid crisis.

Christie says 25 programs will be implemented or expanded.

A $40 million pilot program will reward treatment providers whose clients stay in treatment, are employed, and have stable housing that helps with their recovery.

"We want to incentive those who are providing this treatment to know that at the end of however long their inpatient program is that their obligation does not end to that patient and to their family. This is going to be the gold standard of care across the entire country when we get done."

Christie says the plan calls for $36 million to fund expanded support housing for adults with substance use disorders so they can have a safe, affordable home.

“Additionally an opportunity to learn jobs skills and interviewing techniques to rebuild their lives on the outside. We almost always will try to put them in a new location, someplace away from the neighborhood that may have helped to lead them to the problems that they confronted when they got into treatment in the first place.”

$21 million will be allocated to expand the recovery coach program to every county in the state. Christie says that would provide post-treatment recovery coaching or overdose patients taken to hospital emergency rooms.

“And be able to push them towards an appropriate detox facility, get them to inpatient treatment if necessary or outpatient treatment if that’s what is most appropriate, and then continue to follow the path of these patients to make sure as best they can that the patients stay on the right path.”

Christie says those initiatives will get underway before he leaves office and believes there’s money in New Jersey's budget to pay for them.

“There are hundreds of millions of dollars in programs across the budget that don’t get spent.  And I’ve looked at this really closely. This will not involve any kind of significant reduction in any program nor will it involve the increase in taxes.”