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The original item was published from 2/13/2018 5:37:16 PM to 2/23/2018 4:48:41 PM.

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Legislative District 19

Posted on: February 13, 2018

[ARCHIVED] Legis. RHOADS ANNOUNCES LEGISLATIVE AMENDMENT EXPANDING SOCIAL HOST LEGISLATION TO INCLUDE OPIOIDS

opiod Epidemic

Nassau County Legislator Steve Rhoads was joined by Legislators Thomas McKevitt and Laura Schaefer, along with Presiding Officer Richard Nicolello at a press conference on Tuesday, February 13th, to announce new legislation to help combat the opioid epidemic. The new legislation will expand Nassau County’s current social host law to apply to controlled substances, including opioids. Currently, Nassau’s social host law is only applicable for alcohol.

By including “controlled substances” within the Nassau County Social Host Law, parents, guardians, siblings, friends, and anyone else over the age of eighteen will be held accountable for the consumption of controlled substances by anyone under age twenty-one, or failing to take reasonable corrective action upon learning of the consumption of drugs, at his or her owned, rented, or otherwise controlled private residence. The crime is considered an unclassified misdemeanor, and the fines are $250 for a first offense. A second offense will accrue a fine of $500, and a third offense, and all offenses thereafter will be $1,000 and/or imprisonment not to exceed one year.

“The opioid problem in Nassau County has grown exponentially in recent years,” Legislator Rhoads said. “We have taken it upon ourselves in the Legislature to address this epidemic head on. We have sponsored Narcan training throughout the County to help curb overdoses, and hopefully this legislation will make parents aware of the issues that might be occurring in their own homes.”

 

The original Social Host law was passed by the Nassau County Legislature on July 9, 2007. It prohibits any person over the age of eighteen who owns, rents, or otherwise controls a private residence from knowingly allowing the consumption of alcohol by individuals under the age of 21 on such premises, or failing to take reasonable corrective action upon learning of the consumption of alcohol.

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