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Wisconsin sets sights on opioid prevention, education
Opiod

“911, what is your emergency?”

The caller was frantic, breathless as they fumbled with their phone. They pleaded for help because they found their father/mother/son/daughter/ brother/sister/neighbor on the floor unresponsive. The caller breathed heavy and tried to get their loved one to wake up. Nothing worked.

They had to start CPR. They needed an ambulance. They tried to remember their address for the dispatch. They tried to stay calm as they cycled through compressions. They tried to remember “Staying Alive” to follow a beat— anything to keep their head on straight while another person’s life was on their fingertips then slipped quietly away.

That scene has played out thousands of times across the United States. Sometimes the victims make it and sometimes they don’t. Each year, 100,000 people die from overdose, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

Wisconsin, like most states, has struggled with opiate-related overdoses and fatalities, and, with the advent of Fentanyl, the problem has exacerbated. Gundersen Health Systems, citing an article from Forward Analytics, reported Fentanyl had become the number one killer of people age 25-54 in Wisconsin. In 2020, Fentanyl related fatalities would have accounted for two and half times more deaths than car accidents in that age group if Fentanyl was recorded as a cause of death at the time.

“We have not seen the end of this epidemic,” Chris Eberlein, MD, Gundersen Health System Emergency Medicine Physician, said. “It continues to stress our healthcare systems, our providers and the community at large.”

To combat the swelling numbers, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) announced $1,089,231 in awards to rural Wisconsin communities. The funds seek to improve services for small, less densely populated areas that suffer from “geographic isolation” and transportation barriers. People in those areas were deemed to have difficulties to find and access substance abuse and mental health treatment.

The HRSA money, claimed to be part of President Biden’s Unity Agenda, ear-marked $300,000 for immediate needs, including the supply of opiate overdose reversal medications and an additional $789,231 for communities to develop interventions for the treatment and care of opioid exposed infants.

“Far too many rural families have faced the devastation of overdose, and these deaths are felt deeply across rural communities—where often everyone knows someone lost too soon,” Carole Johnson, HRSA Administrator, said.

The government’s move to assist less populated areas of Wisconsin may not be directly felt in Crawford County, but Fentanyl has left its mark. From January to July 2023, Crawford County has recorded five opioid-related overdoses in individuals 11 years or older. And while five is a small fraction of Wisconsin’s 5,264 total incidents, that’s still five more than zero. Crawford County has recorded as many as five overdoses in one month (Oct. 2021) against a population under 17,000 people.

For Ryan Fradette, Lieutenant Detective for the Crawford County Sheriff’s Department, Fentanyl posed a risk to the community because it’s ubiquitous and transmitted easily.

“It’s like meth; it’s easy to get your hands on,” Fradette said. “It’s such a fine, powdery substance that it’s airborne very easily. And once you breathe it in, it affects your respiratory system.”

“We’re finding Fentanyl in every drug right now,” Casey Cox, Investigating Lieutenant for the Prairie du Chien Police Department, said. “We’re even finding it in Marijuana. It’s affecting us. We’ve had some overdoses with heroine and Fentanyl.” Cox noted that many people are misinformed about Fentanyl, including the misconception that its primary form of transmission is through the skin rather than the respiratory system. Cox said the drug’s transmission effect through the skin can be “sped up” through the use of topical alcohol products, like hand sanitizer.

“Everyone’s concerned if you touch it you’ll overdose, and that’s just not the case,” Cox said.

While Fentanyl has seeped into the nooks and crannies of Wisconsin, law enforcement and government officials have developed strategies to mitigate its influence. Emergency responders’ first tool is Narcan/Naloxone, a drug that can be introduced through the nose with an applicator to negate the effects of opioid overdoses. Both Fradette and Cox stated the Sheriff’s Department and Prairie du Chien Police Department are equipped with Narcan to respond to overdoses. Cox also said Gundersen ambulance has a supply as well.

“These [numbers] would look drastically different if we didn’t have Narcan available,” Dr. Eberlein said. Eberlein estimated Fentanyl most often has caused overdoses in people in their forties, but that age curve would shift “probably 15 years” without Narcan’s wide availability.

Fradette stated Crawford County has received grants from the Department of Justice to combat the presence of methamphetamine. The Sheriff’s Department has implemented new procedures to ensure the safety of their officers.

“We’ve had to change our process with that,” Fradette said. “Now it takes two people to field test.” Fradette noted an investigator has to use an evidence hood for Fentanyl testing and both officers must use proper personal protective equipment (PPE). Equipment includes masks, gloves, and face-shields to prevent exposure.

The Sheriff’s Department has communicated and shared information with the Richland, Iowa and Grant County Task Force (RIG) and credits the K9 units as “a game-changer.” Moreover, Fradette credited the County agencies’proactive law enforcement strategies. “Because of that, I think we’ve kept our numbers down.”

Cox described proactive strategies as traffic stops, the addition of K9 units, extended hours for officers, and patrolling in the community. More than that, Cox pointed to the educational presentations law enforcement officials conduct “all the way from grade schools to the PDC correctional institute.”

InNovember,theDepartment of Emergency Management, part of Crawford County’s Sheriff’s Office, received 2,304 doses of Narcan from the Wisconsin Public Health’s Narcan Direct Program. The Department of Emergency Management distributed doses to emergency management teams, Sheriff’s offices, police departments and other first responder services throughout Crawford and Grant counties. The grant saved local budgets approximately $52,000.

How to Recognize an Overdose: -skin is blue (lips, fingertips first) -body is limp -face is pale -cold, clammy skin -person is conscious but unable to respond -choking, gurgling sounds -breathing slow, irregular, or stopped -pulse slow, erratic or not there -emesis -lack of consciousness How to Respond to an Overdose: -Try to wake them up -give Narcan/naloxone -start CPR -put them in recovery position On Dec. 6, 2023, Crawford County’s Department of Emergency Management issued a notice that the county had obtained a grant for 6,000 Fentanyl test strips, valued at $4,500. The test strips were made available at all of Crawford County’s first responder agencies, including previous Narcan partners.

Crawford County’s Narcan partners include: Mar-Mac Police Department ·Richland County Sheriff’s Office ·Vernon County Sheriff’s Office ·Viola Police Department ·Richland Center Police Department ·Grant County Emergency Management ·Grant County Sheriff’s Office ·Bridgeport Fire and First Responders ·North Crawford Rescue ·Ocooch Mountain Rescue ·Ferryville Fire and First Responder ·City of Prairie du Chien Police Department

It was quite an election
On April 1
Election Results_April 1, 2025 Crawford County

Politics-weary Wisconsin citizens mustered the verve to once again go to the polls in Wisconsin’s April 1 spring election. With record spending, a barrage of campaign literature in mailboxes, chaos on the federal level, and an endless stream of divisive TV advertising, voters on both sides turned out in record numbers to support the candidates of their choice.

Happy or sad, it’s likely the vast majority is just glad it’s over. While most spring elections draw much lower turnout than a presidential election, voter turnout in this year’s race was on par with last November’s contentious election in which Donald Trump defeated Kamala Harris for the office of President of the United States.

Of course, the Wisconsin Supreme Court election took top billing, garnering record amounts of spending. Conservative versus liberal control of the court was on the line with the retirement of liberal justice Ann Walsh Bradley. Contending for the 10-year term were Waukesha County Judge Brad Schimel and Dane County Judge Susan Crawford.

The race was called for Crawford around 10 p.m. after Schimel called her to concede. The unofficial results show Crawford winning with 55% of the statewide vote to Schimel’s 45%.

Crawford County voters bucked recent electoral trends, carrying for the liberal candidate. In the county, Crawford took 51% of the vote, defeating Schimel with 49%. Crawford’s candidacy also prevailed in Vernon County with 54% of the vote, Richland County with 52% of the vote, La Crosse County with 63% of the vote, Sauk County with 57% of the vote, Iowa County with 62% of the vote, and Green County with 58% of the vote. Crawford’s victory was propelled by massive turnout and majorities in Dane, Milwaukee, Rock, Eau Claire and Bayfield counties. Voters in Dane County cast 82% of their votes for Crawford, in Milwaukee County 75%, in Rock County 61%, in Eau Claire 63%, and in Bayfield 61%.

Schimel’s campaign prevailed locally in Grant, Lafayette and Monroe counties, earning 52%, 51%, and 55% of votes cast respectively.

Incumbents prevail

It was also a night for incumbent candidates to prevail in races pertaining to public education in the state. Incumbent Wisconsin State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jill Underly won her race against charter school advocate Brittany Kinser, taking 53% of the statewide vote to Kinser’s 47%.

Locally, Underly outperformed Supreme Court candidate Susan Crawford, winning her contest in counties that carried for Waukesha County judge Brad Schimel. Those counties include Grant and Lafayette counties, where Underly took 52% of votes cast. Kinser held on to votes cast for Schimel in Monroe County, taking 56% of votes cast.

Underly’s candidacy prevailed in Crawford, Vernon, Richland, Iowa, Sauk, and La Crosse counties. In those counties, Underly took 53%, 54%, 56%, 61%, 57%, and 61% respectively.

Mirroring the results in the statewide Superintendent of Public Instruction race, incumbent candidates Jerry Coleman and Charissa Richter prevailed against challengers Jesse Swenson and Melany Jelinek winning two three-year terms on the North Crawford School Board.

Coleman was the top vote-getter, with 660 votes, followed by Richter with 532 votes. Richter and challenger Melany Jelinek ran neck-in-neck for much of the night until results came in for the villages of Gays Mills and Bell Center, which pushed Richter over the finish line ahead. Jelinek finished with 502 votes, and Swenson with 412 votes.

Coleman took the most votes in the towns of Clayton, Haney, Scott, Utica, and in the villages of Bell Center, Gays Mills, and Soldiers Grove. Richter took the second most votes in the towns of Clayton, Haney, Scott, and Utica, and in the villages of Gays Mills and Soldiers Grove. Jelinek took more votes than Richter in the town of Freeman, and in the villages of Bell Center and Mt. Sterling.

Voter ID

Voters across the state voted to amend the Wisconsin Constitution to require photo identification to vote. The measure failed only in Dane and Milwaukee counties. Wisconsin had already required voters to show identification, but passage of the Republican-backed ballot question will make it harder for that requirement to be removed by the courts or the state legislature.

Statewide, the measure passed with 63% of the vote, with 37% of the voters voting against it.