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Alaska Substance Abuse News
Alaska Governor signs five Interior bills

Alaska Gov. Frank Murkowski signed five bills penned by Alaska Interior legislators into law Wednesday, including a measure introduced by Alaska Rep. Jim Holm, R-Fairbanks, Alaska to create guidelines for the cleanup of illegal meth labs. Holm's measure requires Alaska law enforcement to post signs warning of the danger of entering a property that was used as a drug lab. Among its many provisions, it also creates guidelines for when such a property can be occupied, sold, rented or leased and mandates testing procedures and standards to see whether a property is livable.

Alaska property owners would be allowed to go after the tenants responsible in order to pay for the cleanup, but otherwise would have to foot the bill themselves.

Holm's bill was actually introduced last year by Anchorage, Alaska Democratic Sen. Gretchen Guess, then a member of the Alaska state House. It passed the House but the Senate ran out of time at the end of the session before it could vote on it. Holm reintroduced the bill this year and it passed unanimously in both the House and Senate.

Another Holm bill, House Bill 250, was also signed into Alaska law Wednesday. The bill changes provisions regarding the procedures undertaken to settle claims filed by contractors with Alaska. It establishes timelines for the Alaska state procurement officer to make a decision regarding a contract dispute, requires arbitration to settle contract disputes under $250,000 and awards attorney fees and costs to the prevailing party. The bill passed both the House and Senate unanimously.

A pair of bills introduced by Sen. Ralph Seekins, R-Fairbanks, Alaska were also ratified by Murkowski on Wednesday. Senate Bill 198 precludes a peace officer or firefighter from suing for damages suffered while on duty, unless the damages are based on an act unrelated to the fire or other event the person was called out on. The bill unanimously passed both the Alaska House and Senate.

Senate Bill 87 rewrites Alaska's Uniform Principal and Income Act. The 13-page bill creates procedures for trustees administering an estate to separate principal from income, and alters Alaska's trust investment law to work with more modern investment approaches. The bill passed both houses unanimously.

Murkowski also ratified House Bill 120, introduced by House Majority Leader John Coghill, R-North Pole. The bill exempts extended service contracts and warranty extensions--such as those sold by department stores--from being regulated as insurance.

The bill differentiates between a warranty extension, which guarantees the operation of an item due to normal usage, and insurance, which covers an item from external damage. The bill passed the House 34-0 and the Senate 19-1.


Alaska Treatment Facts

  • During 2000, of the 5,563 individuals entering substance abuse treatment in Alaska, 341 were for cocaine .
  • During 2000, of the 5,563 individuals entering substance abuse treatment in Alaska, 524 were for marijuana .
  • During 2000, of the 5,563 individuals entering substance abuse treatment in Alaska, 31 were for heroin .
  • During 2000, of the 5,563 individuals entering substance abuse treatment in Alaska, 53 were for meth .
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If you or someone you care for is has a substance abuse problem and needs treatment, it is important to know that no single treatment approach is appropriate for all individuals. Finding the right substance abuse treatment program involves careful consideration of such things as the setting, length of care, philosophical approach and your or your loved one's needs.

  • Effective treatment must attend to the multiple needs of the individual -- not just the drug use.
  • Remaining in substance abuse treatment for an adequate period of time is critical for treatment effectiveness and positive change.
  • Each person is different and the amount of time in treatment will depend on his or her problems and needs. Research shows that for most individuals, the beginning of improvement begins at about 3 months into treatment. After this time, there is usually further progress toward recovery.
  • Counseling (individual and/or group) and other behavioral therapies are critical components of effective treatment.
  • In treatment, individuals look at issues of motivation, build skills to resist drug use, replace drug-using activities with constructive and rewarding behaviors, and improve problem-solving skills. Behavioral therapy also facilitates interpersonal relationships and the individual's ability to function in the home and community.
  • Detoxification is only the first stage of substance abuse treatment and by itself does little to change long-term drug use.
  • Detoxification safely manages the acute physical symptoms of withdrawal associated with stopping substance use. While detoxification alone is rarely sufficient to help addicts achieve long-term abstinence, for some individuals it is a strongly indicated precursor to effective drug addiction treatment.
  • Strong motivation can facilitate the treatment process. Support from family and friends can increase significantly both treatment entry and retention rates and the success of drug treatment interventions.
  • It is important to match treatment settings, interventions, and services to each individual's particular problems and needs. This is critical to his or her ultimate success in returning to healthy functioning in the family, school, work and society.

Patients who stay in substance abuse treatment longer than 3 months usually have better outcomes than those who stay less time. Patients who go through medically assisted withdrawal to minimize discomfort but do not receive any further treatment, perform about the same in terms of their substance use as those who were never treated. Over the last 25 years, studies have shown that treatment works to reduce drug intake and crimes committed by drug-dependent people. Researchers also have found that drug abusers who have been through treatment are more likely to have jobs.

The ultimate goal of all substance abuse treatment is to enable the individual to achieve lasting abstinence, but the immediate goals are to reduce drug use, improve the patient's ability to function, and minimize the medical and social complications of drug abuse. Nearly all addicted individuals believe in the beginning that they can stop using drugs on their own, and most try to stop without treatment. However, most of these attempts result in failure to achieve long-term abstinence. Research has shown that long-term substance abuse results in significant changes in brain function that persist long after the individual stops using drugs. These drug-induced changes in brain function may have many behavioral consequences, including the compulsion to use drugs despite adverse consequences, the defining characteristic of addiction.

Understanding that addiction has such an important biological component may help explain an individual's difficulty in achieving and maintaining abstinence without treatment. Psychological stress from work or family problems, social cues (such as meeting individuals from one's drug-using past), or the environment (such as encountering streets, objects, or even smells associated with substance abuse) can interact with biological factors to hinder attainment of sustained abstinence and make relapse more likely. Research studies indicate that even the most severely addicted individuals can participate actively in treatment and that active participation is essential to good outcomes.


  Links
alcoholaddiction.info
drugstatistics.com
heroinaddiction2.com
drugrehabilitationcenters.com
drugrehabilitation.info

Alaska Facts

  • Outsiders first discovered Alaska in 1741 when Danish explorer Vitus Jonassen Bering sighted it on a voyage from Siberia.


  • Russian whalers and fur traders on Kodiak Island established the first settlement in Alaska in 1784.


  • In 1867 United States Secretary of State William H. Seward offered Russia $7,200,000, or two cents per acre, for Alaska.


  • On October 18, 1867 Alaska officially became the property of the United States. Many Americans called the purchase "Seward's Folly."


  • Alaska officially became the 49th state on January 3, 1959.


  • Cities in Alaska :
       Adak
       Akhiok
       Akiachak
       Akiak
       Akutan
       Alakanuk
       Alatna
       Alcan Border
       Aleknagik
       Aleneva
       Allakaket
       Alpine
       Ambler
       Anaktuvuk Pass
       Anchor Point
       Anchorage
       Anderson
       Angoon
       Aniak
       Anvik
       Arctic Village
       Atka
       Atmautluak
       Atqasuk
       Attu Station
       Barrow
       Bear Creek
       Beaver
       Beluga
       Bethel
       Bettles
       Big Delta
       Big Lake
       Birch Creek
       Brevig Mission
       Buckland
       Buffalo Soapstone
       Butte
       Cantwell
       Central
       Chalkyitsik
       Chase
       Chefornak
       Chenega
       Chevak
       Chickaloon
       Chicken
       Chignik
       Chignik Lagoon
       Chignik Lake
       Chiniak
       Chisana
       Chistochina
       Chitina
       Chuathbaluk
       Circle
       Clam Gulch
       Clark's Point
       Coffman Cove
       Cohoe
       Cold Bay
       Coldfoot
       College
       Cooper Landing
       Copper Center
       Copperville
       Cordova
       Covenant Life
       Craig
       Crooked Creek
       Crown Point
       Cube Cove
       Deering
       Delta Junction
       Deltana
       Diamond Ridge
       Dillingham
       Diomede
       Dot Lake
       Dot Lake Village
       Dry Creek
       Eagle
       Eagle Village
       Edna Bay
       Eek
       Egegik
       Eielson Afb
       Ekwok
       Elfin Cove
       Elim
       Emmonak
       Ester
       Evansville
       Excursion Inlet
       Fairbanks
       False Pass
       Farm Loop
       Ferry
       Fishhook
       Flat
       Fort Greely
       Fort Yukon
       Four Mile Road
       Fox
       Fox River
       Fritz Creek
       Funny River
       Gakona
       Galena
       Gambell
       Game Creek
       Gateway
       Glacier View
       Glennallen
       Golovin
       Goodnews Bay
       Grayling
       Gulkana
       Gustavus
       Haines
       Halibut Cove
       Happy Valley
       Harding Birch Lakes
       Healy
       Healy Lake
       Hobart Bay
       Hollis
       Holy Cross
       Homer
       Hoonah
       Hooper Bay
       Hope
       Houston
       Hughes
       Huslia
       Hydaburg
       Hyder
       Igiugig
       Iliamna
       Ivanof Bay
       Juneau
       Kachemak
       Kake
       Kaktovik
       Kalifornsky
       Kaltag
       Karluk
       Kasaan
       Kasigluk
       Kasilof
       Kenai
       Kenny Lake
       Ketchikan
       Kiana
       King Cove
       King Salmon
       Kipnuk
       Kivalina
       Klawock
       Klukwan
       Knik Fairview
       Knik River
       Kobuk
       Kodiak
       Kodiak Station
       Kokhanok
       Koliganek
       Kongiganak
       Kotlik
       Kotzebue
       Koyuk
       Koyukuk
       Kupreanof
       Kwethluk
       Kwigillingok
       Lake Louise
       Lake Minchumina
       Lakes
       Larsen Bay
       Lazy Mountain
       Levelock
       Lime Village
       Livengood
       Lowell Point
       Lower Kalskag
       Lutak
       Manley Hot Springs
       Manokotak
       Marshall
       Mccarthy
       Mcgrath
       Mckinley Park
       Meadow Lakes
       Mekoryuk
       Mendeltna
       Mentasta Lake
       Metlakatla
       Meyers Chuck
       Miller Landing
       Minto
       Moose Creek
       Moose Pass
       Mosquito Lake
       Mountain Village
       Mud Bay
       Naknek
       Nanwalek
       Napakiak
       Napaskiak
       Naukati Bay
       Nelchina
       Nelson Lagoon
       Nenana
       New Allakaket
       New Stuyahok
       Newhalen
       Newtok
       Nightmute
       Nikiski
       Nikolaevsk
       Nikolai
       Nikolski
       Ninilchik
       Noatak
       Nome
       Nondalton
       Noorvik
       North Pole
       Northway
       Northway Junction
       Northway Village
       Nuiqsut
       Nulato
       Nunapitchuk
       Old Harbor
       Oscarville
       Ouzinkie
       Palmer
       Paxson
       Pedro Bay
       Pelican
       Perryville
       Petersburg
       Petersville
       Pilot Point
       Pilot Station
       Pitkas Point
       Platinum
       Pleasant Valley
       Point Baker
       Point Hope
       Point Lay
       Point Mackenzie
       Pope Vannoy Landing
       Port Alexander
       Port Alsworth
       Port Clarence
       Port Graham
       Port Heiden
       Port Lions
       Port Protection
       Portage Creek
       Primrose
       Prudhoe Bay
       Quinhagak
       Rampart
       Red Devil
       Red Dog Mine
       Ridgeway
       Ruby
       Russian Mission
       Salamatof
       Salcha
       Sand Point
       Savoonga
       Saxman
       Scammon Bay
       Selawik
       Seldovia
       Seldovia Village
       Seward
       Shageluk
       Shaktoolik
       Sheldon Point (nunam Iqua)
       Shishmaref
       Shungnak
       Silver Springs
       Sitka
       Skagway
       Skwentna
       Slana
       Sleetmute
       Soldotna
       South Naknek
       St. George
       St. Mary's
       St. Michael
       St. Paul
       Stebbins
       Sterling
       Stevens Village
       Stony River
       Sunrise
       Susitna
       Sutton Alpine
       Takotna
       Talkeetna
       Tanacross
       Tanaina
       Tanana
       Tatitlek
       Tazlina
       Teller
       Tenakee Springs
       Tetlin
       Thoms Place
       Thorne Bay
       Togiak
       Tok
       Toksook Bay
       Tolsona
       Tonsina
       Trapper Creek
       Tuluksak
       Tuntutuliak
       Tununak
       Twin Hills
       Two Rivers
       Tyonek
       Ugashik
       Unalakleet
       Unalaska
       Upper Kalskag
       Valdez
       Venetie
       Wainwright
       Wales
       Wasilla
       Whale Pass
       White Mountain
       Whitestone Logging Camp
       Whittier
       Willow
       Willow Creek
       Wiseman
       Womens Bay
       Wrangell
       Y
       Yakutat