ONLINE CHALLENGE: #1

Editor's note: I was deeply moved when I heard this commentary on National Public Radio the other day about how the community of Blackey, Kentucky, has been ravaged by addiction to the pain killer OxyContin.
The context of this commentary was that, over the summer, the drug's maker -- Purdue Pharma -- had agreed to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to many states because the manufacturer had encouraged doctors to over-prescribe the drug. And last week, the state of Kentucky refused the settlement and instead sued the manufacturer saying the drug had ravaged its communities in Appalachia and had cost the state's people millions in health care costs, drug enforcement costs and payments for prescriptions.
This commentary was written and delivered by Natasha Watts of Blackey, an impoverished coal mining community in the eastern Kentucky mountains. She also read this in a speech to Sen. John Edwards on a campaign swing of his this summer.
A NYTIMES link to story about how feds differed on whether to go after drugmaker.
THE ONLINE CHALLENGE Read this, listen to how she delivers it and write about your reaction to the piece. Create a blog and put OC1 and newsblogas the keywords in your blog. We'll assemble the best.
Kentucky Town Grapples with Oxycontin Addiction
By Natasha Watts
Imagine you are sitting in a room with everyone you love: your elementary school teachers, neighbors, childhood friends. And then you leave the room and find out that every single one of those people is an addict. That's how I felt when I returned home after fours years away at college.
I have no social circle here in Blackey anymore. The one friend I have struggles with her ex-boyfriend as he tries to recover. Almost all my other friends are addicted to prescription drugs.
The epidemic has touched my life also. But in a place where you don't air your dirty laundry, it's not something I can talk about.
Kids growing up in my hometown don't remember a time when families weren't affected by drug use. For them the addiction epidemic is just part of the landscape, just another abandoned building.
It's not hard to see how we got to this point. With hundreds of injured coal miners, this area has one of the highest chronic pain rates in the country. For generations we've suffered from all kinds of pain — without the kinds of health services we needed to deal with addiction, poverty, and depression.
Oxycontin isn't the ONLY drug being abused in this area. I remember in high school watching kids I had known since kindergarten, crush pills and snort them on their desks.
I know families who are spending every dime to get their loved ones sober. Nothing seems to work. It's easy to blame the victims and write it off as a "hillbilly problem". But I definitely see some shared responsibility with drug companies who are finally facing penalties.
There's a culture of addiction in eastern Kentucky now. Just taking one drug away won't erase that. The things I valued most in my community have changed forever: trust between neighbors, and intact families.
We're going to live with the human costs of addiction here for generations. Addicts who get clean still won't be able to find jobs in our coal-dependent economy. The mother who finally gets her kids back from the courts won't be able to make up for all the years apart. We have paid for the addiction epidemic with our sisters', brothers', mothers', fathers', grandparents' and friends' lives.
Millions of dollars don't even begin to cover those costs.
Natasha Watts lives in Blackey, Ky., and her essay was produced by the Appalachian Media Institute and Youth Radio.
