“The result: the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Americans from fentanyl poisoning,” U.S. Rep. Jodey Arrington told the House floor on June 12th. He was celebrating the passage of S. 331, the HALT Fentanyl Act, a bipartisan effort to permanently schedule fentanyl analogues as Schedule I — alongside heroin and LSD — granting law enforcement sharper tools to prosecute drug traffickers and protect communities like Lubbock’s.

READ MORE: Lubbock's Arrington Takes Aim at Chinese Trade Loopholes with New Tariff Legislation

House Rules Committee Holds Late Night Meeting On Budget Bill
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It's on the President's Desk

The House overwhelmingly passed the bill 321–104, sending it to President Trump’s desk. The act closes a dangerous legal loophole that has allowed smugglers—often tied to Mexican cartels—to modify fentanyl’s chemical makeup and skirt drug laws.

For Lubbock families already grappling with the deadliest overdose crisis in U.S. history, this legislation offers a measure of hope. In 2023 alone, synthetic opioid overdoses claimed more than 74,000 lives nationwide, fueled largely by fentanyl.

Drug Overdose Deaths Skyrocket In 2020 Fueled By Coronavirus Pandemic
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What Changes With HALT Fentanyl?

• Fentanyl analogues now face permanent classification as Schedule I substances, ending the stopgap emergency rule first applied in 2018.
• Mandatory minimum sentences for possession and distribution remain intact—supporters say it’s vital for prosecuting high-level dealers.
• The act eases research restrictions: scientists can request exemptions for medical study of these substances.

What Do Critics Say?

Still, critics, like Democratic Rep. Frank Pallone, caution that the law might hamper legitimate medical research and inflate prison populations without tackling addiction or prevention.

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But from a West Texas perspective, Arrington says enforcement is key. “This bill gives law enforcement the tools they need to combat these deadly drugs,” he remarked . With Lubbock County reporting rising fentanyl seizures and overdose cases, the legislation arrives as a timely response.

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What's Next?

As the bill heads to the White House, community groups in Lubbock are stepping up awareness efforts. Lubbock’s Substance Use Prevention Coalition is planning free naloxone training next month, while local schools ramp up educational campaigns backed by federal overdose prevention funds.

Arrington added that Lubbock families lost too many to this poison—now, America is fighting back.

Arrington Welcomes Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins to West Texas

House Budget Chairman Jodey Arrington (TX-19) was joined in West Texas by Brooke Rollins, the 33rd United States Secretary of Agriculture.

Gallery Credit: Landon King

Pics from the 2024 Hub City BBQ!

Gallery Credit: Landon King

LOOK: Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders Who Made it to Hollywood

The Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders are an iconic cultural figure in American pop culture. Most of the cheerleaders can put the experience on their resume but only a few have managed to break into Hollywood.

Below are several of the DCC alumni who you may have seen on the big and little screen.

Gallery Credit: Sarah Clark/TSM