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S 5130 118th Congress Senate Crime and Law Enforcement Accounting and auditing Drug trafficking and controlled substances Drug, alcohol, tobacco use Law enforcement administration and funding State and local government operations

Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act

Introduced: September 19, 2024 Introduced by: Cantwell, Maria Democratic · Washington See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 8 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Dec 18, 2024
Held at the desk.
Dec 18, 2024
Received in the House.
Dec 18, 2024
Message on Senate action sent to the House.
Dec 17, 2024
Passed Senate without amendment by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S7096-7097; text: CR S7096-7097)
Dec 17, 2024
Passed/agreed to in Senate: Passed Senate without amendment by Unanimous Consent.
Dec 17, 2024
Senate Committee on the Judiciary discharged by Unanimous Consent.
Sep 19, 2024
Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Sep 19, 2024
Introduced in Senate
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act

This bill expands the allowable uses of grants under the Comprehensive Opioid Abuse Grant Program to include the adoption and implementation of an overdose data collection program to track fatal and nonfatal overdoses and the administration of opioid overdose reversal medication (e.g., the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program).

Specifically, the bill allows states, local governments, coalitions of law enforcement agencies, and Indian tribes to use these grants to develop and implement a data collection tool, including mobile data mapping applications. The tool must allow these entities to easily and quickly track the locations of (1) suspected fatal and nonfatal overdoses, and (2) the administration of opioid overdose reversal medication by first responders.

An entity seeking to use a grant must first conduct an audit of available data and resources and submit the audit with the grant application.

Grant recipients must (1) support the development of coordinated public safety, behavioral health, and public health responses to the data collected by the tool; (2) focus on areas in which fatal and nonfatal overdoses occur and trends of concern; (3) provide for interoperability with existing overdose data collection tools; and (4) make data collected through the program available to federal, state, tribal, and territorial governments and coalitions of law enforcement agencies.

The Department of Justice must consult with agencies that maintain overdose data collection tools, including the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

What's happening now December 18, 2024

Held at the desk.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1