Sarah Beckman, left, stands with other staff members of Ohio's Hamilton County Quick Response Team in an undated photo. The team helps people who use fentanyl get treatment. Ohio had the largest drop in opioid overdose deaths of any state as of October 2025 since the national peak in June 2023. (Photo courtesy of Hamilton County Quick Response Team) Since their peak less than three years ago, opioid overdose deaths dropped nearly by half as of October, according to a Stateline analysis. The drop comes as a shrinking fentanyl supply has made the drug weaker and less deadly and volunteer efforts get more people into treatment. The weaker fentanyl tracks to a crackdown on materials used to make fentanyl in China around the time U.S. deaths started dropping in 2023. Some experts see it as a welcome, but possibly temporary, break for states in a scourge that boosted crime as people who are using the drugs sometimes fall into homelessness and steal to support fentanyl habits. The ...
Sen. Chris Elliott, R-Josephine, (left) speaks with Sen. Vivian Davis Figures, D-Mobile (right) on the floor of the Alabama Senate on Feb. 10, 2026 at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama. Figures on Thursday pressed Elliott on why senators should vote for a bill requiring state agencies to refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector) A Senate vote on a bill that would have required Alabama governments and agencies to refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the “Gulf of America” was delayed Thursday amid a Democratic filibuster. HB 2 , sponsored by Rep. David Standridge, R-Hayden, would require all state and local entities to change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America . Senate Minority Leader Bobby Singleton, D-Greensboro, questioned the need for the bill. “We’ve got gas prices as high as they are today, we’re in the middle of war . . . and we are here talking about the Gulf of America,” Singleton s...