The State Superintendent’s Student Advisory Council drafted model legislation to address a problem they’re seeing among classmates.
Some North Carolina students want to do something about rising drug use and mental health issues among young people.
On Thursday, a student group told the State Board of Education that schools should have wellness teams to help intervene when they see problems.
Sarah Beitar, a member of the State Superintendentโs Student Advisory Council, said she knows someone at her Harnett County high school who overdosed.
โWe have freshmen, so children as young as 14 and 15, having to deal with these topics of overdose and making sure that theyโre being safe,โ she said.
STATESVILLE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) โ โIโm doing this because my 24-year-old daughter, Sophia, was killed by fentanyl on August 16th. And I didnโt even know how to spell fentanyl,โ said Barb Walsh, the executive director of the Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina.
Sheโs been a voice for families suffering the loss of a loved one by fentanyl poisoning.
โItโs just a network of damaged families who are getting together and finding their power and their passion to heal one another, but also to stop that not from killing someone else,โ Walsh said.
The network includes counties like Mecklenburg, Rowan, Iredell, and Catawba. Pictures of those who lost their lives to the poisoning lined the walls at the Bristol Road community center.
Many of their families are doing their best to keep their memories alive.
โFentanyl took my husband on November 2023, And it has changed our whole daily routine. He was in my house every single day walking around and now heโs not,โ said Stephanie Triplett. She started โEmbers for Ashesโ in response to the death of her husband.
โIn 2022, my son T.J. passed away of fentanyl poisoning. He had 18 nanograms of fentanyl in his body, which is enough to kill nine people. He had taken what he thought was oxycodone, but it was a pill that had fentanyl. And heโs been gone since 2022,โ said Stephanie Duck. She started โTJโs Story Lives Onโ
Through tears, families discussed their losses โ but also laid out an action plan to save other victims from death โ putting naloxone in every school.
โWe just donโt know where a young person might encounter fentanyl. And so the safest thing is to have an antidote within the school, just like an ied, just like an EpiPen, just like a fire extinguisher. Itโs not expensive. So weโre advocating for doses per school, not just with school resource officers, but as an emergency first aid kit,โ Walsh said.
BEAUFORT, N.C. (WNCT) โ A 42-year-old woman pled guilty to death by distribution of controlled substances in the death of 30-year-old Pawnee Schmitz.
Carteret County Sheriffโs deputies found Schmitzโs phone at the scene and found conversations regarding drug purchases with multiple individuals the night before Schmitzโs death.
Search warrants for Schmitzโs phone records resulted in the arrest of three people including Melissa Mastropierro. Mastropierro, 42, of Atlantic, was sentenced to just more than five years to eight years in prison.
According to District Attorney Scott Thomas, on May 29, 2023, Carteret County Sheriffโs Department deputies responded to Community Road in Davis. Schmitzโs father made the call to law enforcement, reporting that he found Schmitz lying prone and unconscious on the bathroom floor. EMS arrived to find Schmitz deceased.
Drug paraphernalia and two small bags of methamphetamine and fentanyl were discovered close to Schmitzโs body, according to the sheriffโs office. An autopsy confirmed that the cause of death was from methamphetamine and fentanyl toxicity.
Luis Baez-Roman was arrested and charged with trafficking schedule I, possession with intent to sell and deliver methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia and maintain vehicle for the distribution of controlled substances.
Raleigh police have arrested a man after they say someone died after buying drugs from him at a Raleigh nightclub earlier this month.
Luis Baez-Roman was arrested and charged with trafficking schedule I, possession with intent to sell and deliver methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia and maintain vehicle for the distribution of controlled substances.
A new ad promoting North Carolina Democratic Attorney General Josh Steinโs response to the fentanyl crisis will start running during the Olympics opening ceremony on Friday.
Stein is the Democratic nominee for governor and running against Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson. In the new television and digital ad airing first on Peacock, NBCโs streaming service, a mother talks about her son who died from an accidental fentanyl overdose after taking cocaine laced with fentanyl.
The ad features Debbie Dalton of Cornelius talking about her late son Hunter, who grew up on Lake Norman. Hunter Dalton, 23, graduated from UNC Charlotte in 2016, moved to Raleigh and died that same year. His family and friends started The Hunter Dalton #HDLife Foundation in his memory.
Dalton has spoken at news conferences with Stein in his role as attorney general.
In the ad, Dalton praises Stein for his work on the fentanyl crisis as attorney general and talks about Hunter as โan amazing young man and just loved life. He was my entire world. He made a bad decision that night. If our son had known about fentanyl, he would still be with us today. And it shocked us to our core, shocked our community to the core,โ she said.
โAttorney General Josh Stein stood up for families like mine, worked with law enforcement, and worked across party lines to attack the fentanyl crisis. I knew from the minute that I met him that this is a man that is compassionate and concerned and committed,โ Dalton said.
Join Jeremy Kelsay, the founder of “Every 11 Minutes,” as he appears on Dr. Phil Primetime’s Morning on Merritt Street to address the growing fentanyl crisis. Discover shocking new statistics revealing a death every 5 minutes due to this crisis. Dive into conversations about innovative harm reduction strategies to tackle opioid addiction and find sustainable solutions. Tune in for crucial insights and discussions on combating this urgent issue.
ROWAN COUNTY, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) โ An infant was rushed to the hospital after being exposed to fentanyl, according to the Rowan County Sheriffโs Office.
โ[The baby] was completely blue, and I said, โGod thereโs no hope for that baby,’โ said one neighbor who saw the infant as she was being loaded into an ambulance.
Deputies responded to calls regarding the incident around 2:58 p.m. Saturday, July 20, at a home along Sides Road. An 11-month-old infant was found unconscious and not breathing, and was transported to an area medical center after NARCAN was administered at the scene.
โYou donโt hear a lot of stories about infants being injected with NARCAN because NARCAN is a very strong, powerful drug itself,โ said Rowan County Sheriff Travis Allen. โBut when itโs a life or death situation, you donโt have anything to lose.โ
A state trooper happened to be in the area when the call went out.
โIf a guardian angel was going down the road, it was Trooper Eagle,โ Sheriff Allen continued. โHis CPR efforts before EMS and fire got there most likely saved the child.โ
Following an initial investigation, deputies said that the mother, Jamie Robertson, retrieved a baby bottle from the fatherโs vehicle. She, her daughter, and James Danielson then fell asleep until Robertson awoke to the baby gasping for air and struggling to breathe.
โThe mama she was just tore up,โ the neighbor who did not want to be identified continued to say. โShe really loved that baby, but she was hung up on drugs.โ
Both Robertson and Danielson later admitted to investigators that they had injected fentanyl while in bed with the baby before falling asleep. Unsanitary conditions, along with various items of drug paraphernalia, drug residue, and uncapped syringes were found at the home.
โThey both admitted to injecting each other and then passing out with the child in the bed with them, so itโs just severe neglect on their part,โ said Sheriff Allen.
Danielson and Robertson have both been charged with felony neglect child abuse-serious bodily injury, and misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia.
Both have been placed in the Rowan County Detention Center under a $100,000 secured bond.
The infant has been released from the hospital into DSS custody and is expected to make a full recovery.
This video explains the De Minimis Bill which is aimed to close a loophole which is allowing Fentanyl to enter the United States clothing and other items purchased overseas.
Advocates who are fighting to keep fentanyl off the streets say more needs to be done. ABC11 (Raleigh) interviewed Patricia Drewes and Beth Moore for this story.