In his work as the Kenneth Young Center Recovery Support Services Manager, Daryl Pass drives 100 miles every week to restock the free Narcan vending machines from St. Charles to Des Plaines, Elk Grove to Elgin.
Dispensed through a nasal spray, Narcan, or naloxone, is the first go-to in saving lives from opioid overdoses since its distribution was made legal in 2010. Not only do first responders use it, but also people who know they might need help reviving themselves.
“As a survivor of two overdoses, I would not be here without it,” Pass said. “The last time I OD’d, Narcan was the vessel that saved my life. I am a walking testimony to the importance and effectiveness of what Narcan means to the community.”
As an advocate, Pass does Narcan training and distribution in Kane County and the northwest suburbs of Cook County.
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This past year, Kankakee County Health Department Administrator John Bevis said 18,000 kits were handed out in Kankakee, Iroquois, Grundy and Kendall counties.
There were approximately 100 saves in those four counties last year.
Bevis said they are waiting to see what happens in Fiscal Year 2026 and beyond.
“We have recently submitted our FY26 Opioid grant for $420,000 (reduction of $30,000 from FY 25),” Bevis said. “We anticipate being able to continue with our current program deliverables providing Naloxone over four counties and training anyone into naloxone distribution to help save lives.”
But all that free Narcan may be coming to an end.Though the Trump administration named overdose prevention among its top drug policy priorities, in recent weeks, CNN and the New York Times have reported on a draft budget proposal to cut a $56 million annual grant program for the training and distribution of Narcan.
The annual grant program directly expands access to Narcan through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, or SAMHSA, which helps distribute kits and trains first responders and others on how to use them.
The proposal was in a document that outlined what the New York Times called a “drastic reorganization and shrinking” for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Bevis said they are taking a wait and see approach.
Kankakee County Health Department’s budget is 70% grant funded. It currently has 25 grants served by 35 staff.
“We do continue to monitor the current landscape of grants and funding to determine impact to many of our current programs,” Bevis said.
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‘It’s going to be catastrophic’
Will County Chief Executive Officer Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant said these “dangerous cuts would be disastrous for communities” throughout the county.
The region has been plagued by fatal heroin and opioid overdoses in the past.
“The federally funded naloxone initiatives are saving lives and helping turn the tide in the fight against substance abuse,” Bertino-Tarrant said. “This initiative has a proven track record of saving lives and should not fall victim to this administration’s reckless decisions.”
Another chance
Pass said Narcan not only saves lives, but it also gives people another chance to turn their lives around.
“Many people come back from an overdose and make the decision to turn their life around and become productive citizens in society. Narcan gives individuals another opportunity and another day. So many people have turned their lives around,” he said.
Some will continue to use opioids even after surviving an overdose, but that should not mean giving up on Narcan distribution, Pass said.
“This is a lifesaver no different than CPR or the defibrillator, or any lifesaving treatment,” he said.
$100 million loss to Illinois
Michael Isaacson, executive director of the Kane County Health Department, said the federal budget proposal would be an almost $100 million cut to Illinois for public health support.
“All of these things go together to create a perfect storm of damage to the community, potentially undoing decades of progress,” Isaacson said. “We are already struggling to meet the mental health and substance abuse needs of our community. Any future cuts are going to cause a lot of harm to our residents.”
Herb Stricklin, substance abuse recovery and prevention director for Ecker Center for Behavioral Health, echoed the concern that cutting Narcan funding “is potentially devastating.”
Ecker Center is based in Elgin but has an office in St. Charles, and serves the region.
“Since last November, we had heard rumblings that potential funding for Narcan may be cut, so we actively sought out other alternative means for this issue.”
— Dan Jungles, Will County Sheriff’s deputy chief
Will County Sheriff’s Office prepared
The Will County Sheriff’s Office has a “rather large stockpile” of medication needed to combat the opioid crisis if proposed funding cuts move forward.
Neither the sheriff’s office nor the Will County Substance Abuse Prevention Coalition is worried about a shortage, according to Will County Sheriff’s Deputy Chief Dan Jungles.
He said the sheriff’s office has a “rather large stockpile of Narcan,” and there was enough to offer “out much of our overstock to other area departments.”
He said the departments have “declined our offer” because they, too, have enough “on hand and in overstock.”
“Since last November, we had heard rumblings that potential funding for Narcan may be cut, so we actively sought out other alternative means for this issue,” Jungles said.
The sheriff’s office has also initiated a pilot program agreement with a company called Indivior, a global pharmaceutical company that manufactures a drug called Opvee, Jungles said.
“[Opvee] is similar to Narcan, in that it is an opioid reversal drug, but has longer-lasting effects and studies have shown that it works more effectively on more potent forms of fentanyl,” Jungles said.
Jungles said studies have shown that fewer doses of Opvee will be needed to reverse the effects of an opioid overdose, and it is administered the same way as Narcan. The only additional training needed will be explaining the difference between the two drugs, he said.
The Grundy County Health Department works with the Kankakee County Health Department to distribute Narcan kits, said Katie Harrison, Grundy County Health Department’s director of nursing.
Harrison said the kits also come with a test that lets users know if the drug they’re about to use can’t be reversed by Narcan.