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Fresno City Council to consider Narcan ordinance for businesses serving alcohol

On Thursday, the Fresno City Council is expected to vote on a new ordinance that will give businesses that serve alcohol access to the opioid reversal drug Narcan. The Fresno City Council is set to vote on a new ordinance that would allow businesses that serve alcohol access to the Narcan drug. This comes after approximately 300 related fentanyl deaths in Fresno County in the past three years, according to Annalisa Perea, city council president. The new ordinance will offer two cans to bars, nightclubs, lounges, and restaurants that also serve alcohol. This would be the first city in the state and second in the nation to adopt such an ordinance. However, Flindt Andersen from Parents and Addicts In Need, who believes the ordinance is a good step forward but urges state lawmakers to make a change in prevention and recovery.

Fresno City Council to consider Narcan ordinance for businesses serving alcohol

Published : a month ago by in Business

Fresno City Council to consider Narcan ordinance for businesses serving alcohol

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- On Thursday, the Fresno City Council is expected to vote on a new ordinance that will give businesses that serve alcohol access to the opioid reversal drug Narcan.

"In the last three years here alone in Fresno County, we've experienced approximately 300 related fentanyl deaths," said Annalisa Perea, city council president.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, fentanyl is 50 times stronger than heroine.

Perea says this new ordinance will offer two cans to bars, nightclubs, lounges and even restaurants that serve alcohol.

Fresno will be the first city in the state, and second in the nation to adopt an ordinance like this.

"We do have a great partnership with the Fresno County Public Health Department and so they have agreed to work with us to not only distribute, not only help us train the managers but to provide the free dose," said Perea .

But it's not just bars community members are concerned about.

Less than ten miles away from City Hall, one organization is fighting to get as many Narcan devices in the hands of people who may need them.

"We worked with Clovis Unified. And now Clovis Unified has Narcan, not only in their schools but in almost every classroom," explained Flindt Andersen with Parents and Addicts In Need, also known as PAIN.

Pictures of celebrities that have overdosed in years past line the walls of PAIN.

Andersen says it's a grim reminder of the drug problem in America.

"We are in an epidemic like we have never seen before," said Andersen.

Andersen says he's received pushback from people scared of handling Narcan devices.

"You simply want to take and put it in their nostril and just squirt. It's one shot per nostril," Andersen demonstrated.

Although he believes the city ordinance is a good step forward, Andersen urges state lawmakers to make a change when it comes to prevention and recovery.

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