Closure of detox center could lead to exposure deaths near Navajo Nation

Police in Page, Arizona, are worried about people freezing to death after a detox center on the border of the Navajo Nation closed. From Flagstaff, Laurel Morales reports.

LAUREL MORALES: State budget cuts and unexpectedly low enrollment numbers at the detox center forced the Northern Arizona Regional Behavioral Health Authority to pull its funding. But police say the number of deaths from exposure to the cold had dropped since the detox center opened 15 years ago -- from about a dozen deaths a year to around three. Lieutenant James Bartell says now if police find someone passed out, they have few options.

JAMES BARTELL: We send them on their way to where they wonder on their way or they find a place to wait out the night a convenience store or they find an open door at a motel and hide in the stairwells.

LAUREL MORALES: If they’re unable to wake up, police will call them an ambulance. The sale and consumption of alcohol on the Navajo Nation is banned in most places. Police say up to 95 percent of those at the detox center in Page were American Indian.

Listen to this story.


Pledge Now
Give Monthly
Facebook logo
Twitter logo

Please read our Contributor Confidentiality Policy and the KJZZ Ethics and Practices guidelines. KJZZ supports Equal Employment Opportunities and works against discrimination in employment. For more information, please see KJZZ's Employment and EEO Information page.
For questions or comments about this website, please contact the KJZZ webmaster. For general comments or questions see the Contact KJZZ page for a listing of contacts by topic. Please note: Station policy mandates that listeners who win on-air giveaways on this station are not eligible to win again for 30 days.
Email regarding NPR's coverage, ethics, and funding can be sent to the NPR Ombudsman, who maintains an informative web page. For comments or concerns regarding NPR programs, listeners with a general inquiry may send an email to nprhelp@npr.org

KJZZ is a service of Rio Salado College, and Maricopa Community Colleges.
Copyright© 2013 KJZZ/Rio Salado College/MCCCD