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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Varela
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/29/07
HB 474
SHORT TITLE Women’s Prison Anti-Addiction Pilot Project
SB
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$250.0
Recurring
General
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to: HB 224
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
Corrections Department (NMCD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 474 would appropriate $250,000 from the general fund to the Department of Health
(DOH) for expenditure in fiscal year 2009 (FY09) to support a Buprenorphine pilot project at the
New Mexico Women’s Prison to test anti-addiction medication therapy. Any unexpended
balance remaining at the end of FY09 would revert to the General Fund.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The funding in HB 474 is not a part of DOH’s executive budget request. NMCD notes that if
NMCD chooses to participate in the administration or evaluation of the pilot project involving its
female inmates, then there would be an administrative cost to NMCD. NMCD is also not sure
that the $250,000 appropriation is sufficient to conduct the project, with or without the
administrative assistance of NMCD.
pg_0002
House Bill 474 – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Corrections Department opposes this legislation. This bill, unlike HB 224, would require
DOH to administer an opiate replacement drug to female inmates while still in prison. HB 224
focuses on the outpatient use of the drug (after the women have paroled or discharged from an
NMCD prison), with the drug’s use being initiated only very shortly before the women are
released from prison.
As far as NMCD can determine, no entity has ever studied an opiate replacement drug on
continuously incarcerated individuals. The reasons for this are many. Such drugs can be habit
forming, dangerous, can be sold or bartered in prison and create prison safety and security issues,
could lead to lawsuits against prisons and prison medical providers where the drug was given to
the inmates, etc. Significantly, such a study could easily be viewed as unethical experimentation
upon inmates who are unable to give legitimate, informed consent to taking the drug. HB 224,
which focuses on female offenders who take the drug while out of prison and who, therefore,
generally have the ability to give informed consent to take or not take the drug, does not raise the
same ethical concerns or considerations. Further, such a study would probably require the
approval, or at least the input, of the federal Drug Enforcement Agency.
DOH notes that opiate addiction in New Mexico is associated with high rates of morbidity and
mortality. In 2007, New Mexico was ranked third in the United States in per-capita overdose
deaths (NMDOH Substance Abuse Epidemiology, 2007). According to DOH, 85% of
incarcerated women in New Mexico have a history of addiction and 40% have a history of
injection drug use (NMDOH Substance Abuse Epidemiology, 2004). Additionally, especially
among women, addiction and its concomitant issues are implicated in high rates of recidivism
(NMCD, 2004).
The more than 600 women incarcerated in the NM Women’s Correctional Facility collectively
leave behind 1,800 dependent children under the age of 18. Incarceration in New Mexico costs
about $100 a day per person, and women returning to prison for narcotic-related activities cost
New Mexican taxpayers nearly $3,000,000 per year (Senate Joint Memorial 29 Study, 2002).
Buprenorphine is a Drug Enforcement Agency-approved daily oral medication that, when
combined with Naloxone, effectively blocks the action of heroin and other opiates. It is an
extremely safe medication that is used in community-based opiate treatment programs.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
NMCD has concern about dealing with female prisoners, or any prisoner for that matter, who are
taking habit forming, dangerous drugs during their prison sentences. DEA registration issues
and requirements, lawsuits by female prisoners who become or may become addicted to the
drug, ethical considerations, and prison safety and security problems make such a study too risky
for NMCD.
RELATIONSHIP
This bill is related to HB 224. However, HB 224 pertains to an outpatient study, not an “in-
prison" study of an opiate replacement drug.
pg_0003
House Bill 474 – Page
3
AMENDMENT
Since the transfer of the Behavioral Health Services Division to the Human Services Department
on July, 1 2008, the Department of Health no longer has the programmatic expertise to
implement behavioral health treatment programs. DOH suggests the following amendment: on
page 1, line 18 remove the “Department of Health" and replace with the “Human Services
Department".
GG/mt