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Bill > HR2463


US HR2463

US HR2463
DROP Act of 2015 Dispose Responsibly of your Pills Act of 2015


summary

Introduced
05/20/2015
In Committee
06/16/2015
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/03/2017

Introduced Session

114th Congress

Bill Summary

DROP Act of 2015 Dispose Responsibly of your Pills Act of 2015 Authorizes the Attorney General, in coordination with the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Secretary of Health and Human Services, and the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, to make grants to eligible entities to expand or make available disposal sites for unwanted prescription medications. Defines "eligible entity" to include: a state, local, or tribal law enforcement agency; a manufacturer, distributor, or reverse distributor of prescription medications; a retail pharmacy; a registered narcotic treatment program; a hospital or clinic with an on-site pharmacy; and an eligible long-term care facility. Requires a recipient to use a grant for: expenses of a prescription drug disposal site; implementing disposal procedures and processes and community education strategies; replicating a prescription drug take back initiative throughout multiple jurisdictions; and training of law enforcement officers and other community participants. Limits grants to not more than $250,000 for not longer than two years. Directs the Attorney General to make a grant: (1) to provide technical assistance and training for a grant recipient, and (2) for evaluation of each recipient's performance. Requires recipients to report each fiscal year on: (1) the effectiveness of their prescription drug take back programs, and (2) the effect of disposal efforts on drug circulation.

AI Summary

This bill, known as the DROP Act of 2015 or Dispose Responsibly of your Pills Act of 2015, authorizes the Attorney General to award grants to various entities, including law enforcement agencies, pharmacies, manufacturers, and healthcare facilities, to establish or expand sites for the safe disposal of unwanted prescription medications. These grants, capped at $250,000 per recipient for a maximum of two years, can be used for operational expenses of disposal sites, implementing disposal procedures, community education, expanding take-back initiatives to new areas, and training personnel. The bill also mandates that the Attorney General provide technical assistance and training to grant recipients and conduct evaluations of their programs, requiring recipients to report annually on the effectiveness of their drug take-back programs and the impact of disposal efforts on drug circulation, with these reports to be made publicly available.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry, Health and Social Services, Military Affairs and Security

Sponsors (9)

Last Action

Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations. (on 06/16/2015)

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