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ON-AIR SEGMENT: Assemblyman Robert Smullen discusses the ‘Fentanyl Fathers and Mothers Act’

Published on July 28, 2025

Robert Smullen Fentynal Act July 2025

ALBANY, NY- Assemblyman Robert Smullen (R,C-Mohawk Valley and the Adirondacks) held a press conference last month alongside Co-Founder of the Fentanyl Fathers Non-Profit Organization Greg Swan and members of the Assembly Minority Conference in Albany on Wednesday, June 11, 2025, to introduce Assembly Bill A.8540, also known as the “Fentanyl Fathers and Mothers Act.”

This proposal, according to Smullen's office,  will require New York state to develop and adopt a comprehensive Fentanyl Education, Awareness and Recognition Program for all public, charter and private schools to implement for their students in grades six through 12.

“We must educate our children and teens to protect them from the onslaught of fatal substances being pushed into our communities illegally,” said Assemblyman Smullen.

“In many cases, a child or teen believes they are purchasing one drug when in reality that drug is mixed with other illicit substances or is something else entirely. Dealers often advertise the drug falsely, and a fake pill mixed with fentanyl can be deadly if a small amount is accidentally ingested—even an amount as small as the tip of a pencil."

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According to Smullen's office, synthetic opioids like fentanyl are not only the primary driver of overdose deaths in New York state but also in the rest of the U.S. From Jan. 31, 2020, to Jan. 31, 2021, overdose deaths involving opioids rose by 38.1% nationwide.

During that same period, overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids, primarily illicitly manufactured fentanyl, rose by 55.6% nationwide.

Smullen asserts the Fentanyl Fathers and Mothers Act will provide a comprehensive educational program for youth and young adults to learn about the potentially fatal consequences of fentanyl and other deadly substances, thus saving the lives of countless New Yorkers.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of opioid-related deaths that occurred between 2018 and 2024 in New York state was nearly 30,000. The vast majority of these deaths involved non-methadone synthetic opioids, which is the category that includes fentanyl, its derivatives and similar synthetic opioids like carfentanil.

Image via the office of Assemblyman Robert Smullen.

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