Advocacy Alert: Joint Statement Opposing SAMHSA Cuts and Any Harmful HHS Restructuring
April 24, 2025
via CAADAC
On April 15, 2025, eighty leading stakeholder groups (including NBHAP) joined together to oppose recent funding and staffing cuts to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)'s Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and any HHS restructuring that weakens the community infrastructure of substance use and mental health services and supports.
As organizations working to strengthen access to life-saving substance use and mental health services, medications, and supports, we oppose the recent program funding rescissions and staffing cuts at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)'s Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), the only federal agency specifically charged with addressing the needs of the millions of people in this country with substance use and mental health conditions. We also oppose any restructuring of HHS that could lead to additional weakening of the infrastructure of critical substance use and mental health services, and/or that harms the broader community infrastructure of health services and supports for people with disabilities, older adults, and people living with HIV/AIDS and other chronic diseases. HHS's activities touch the lives of virtually all Americans, playing a critical role in helping people throughout the country access the care they need to get and stay well, and these deep cuts leave us deeply concerned about how this vital work can continue.
Recent action to rescind $1 billion in appropriated SAMHSA funds slated for critical activities to stem the overdose crisis and the reported 50% reduction in the agency's workforce threatens the vital infrastructure that supports substance use prevention, treatment and recovery, overdose prevention and other harm reduction strategies, as well as mental health services and supports throughout the country. Also under threat is the agency's capacity to continue critical data collection and development of important resources that help individuals and their loved ones find and receive appropriate care, inform best practices for providers and communities, and facilitate much needed research. Reducing funding and staffing at the federal level will no doubt trickle down to states and localities, resulting in likely program closures, layoffs, and a weakened network of community-based services nationwide. In turn, access to essential care, medications, and supports that help millions of children, adults, and families could be severely restricted. They will likewise make it extraordinarily difficult to sustain recent, hard-earned reductions in the national overdose death rate and will place people whose rates of overdose continue to increase at even greater risk.
Furthermore, the proposed restructuring of HHS, including the elimination of critical offices and regional resources, threatens to dilute other essential programs and erode the Department's ability to respond effectively to substance use and mental health challenges. The loss of experienced federal employees and experts will diminish the quality of research, data collection, guidance, and support available to states and localities and will disrupt the synergy within HHS and its capacity to meet the needs of vulnerable communities. These cuts will disproportionately affect already underserved populations exacerbating existing health disparities. As the Administration considers all of these potential changes to statutorily authorized agencies, programs, and personnel, we instead encourage use of a thoughtful, deliberative process with Congress and stakeholders to first examine the potential impact.
The Public Health Emergency, originally declared during President Trump's first term and extended this past March, remains a crucial framework for addressing the overdose crisis. The recently released White House Office of National Drug Control Policy Statement of Drug Policy Principles states that, "we must acknowledge the complexity of substance use disorder and addiction" and that what our nation is experiencing requires "a comprehensive approach that emphasizes drug use prevention and increases access to recovery and overdose prevention and reversal services." We agree with this statement. Yet sweeping staffing reductions and funding rescissions will no doubt threaten access to lifesaving substance use disorder care.
As our nation grapples with the continuing opioid Public Health Emergency and rising mental health needs, the lives of millions of Americans continue to be at stake. We urge the Administration to reverse these funding, programmatic, and staffing cuts and ensure all Americans can access the care they need to live healthy, safe, fulfilling lives.
Read the full announcement here.
Questions? Concerns?
As always, we want your input. What topics would you like to see us cover in future Advocacy Alerts? If you are a representative of a state association and have something for us to consider for an Advocacy Alert, let us know!
Did you know NBHAP members get regular access to our advocate in Washington, DC? If you have any questions about NBHAP's advocacy efforts, please contact us.
A national membership association that provides education and advocacy for those in the behavioral health and addiction treatment industries.
We are the leading and unifying voice of addiction-focused treatment programs.