HR 1064 · in committee · significant
Stopping Overdoses of Fentanyl Analogues Act
- criminal justice
What this bill does
- Permanently adds fentanyl-related substances to the federal schedule of highly controlled drugs.
- Affects drug manufacturers, distributors, and people who use or possess fentanyl analogues.
- Replaces a temporary DEA order expiring March 31, 2025 with permanent legal classification.
Generated by claude-haiku-4-5
Community Threads
Started by Cosponsor
- 01
How would permanently scheduling fentanyl analogues affect pharmaceutical companies developing pain medications compared to the current temporary DEA order?
- 02
What evidence supports that permanent scheduling would reduce overdose deaths more effectively than existing enforcement of temporary controls?
- 03
Which groups—manufacturers, people with addiction, law enforcement, or patients with chronic pain—face the largest consequences if this permanent classification replaces the expiring temporary order?
Cosponsor writes these to seed civic discussion — they aren't user posts. Sign in to reply.

Sponsor · R-WI-5
Scott Fitzgerald
Citizen cosponsors
0
In Congress
0/ 435
House Reps cosponsoring
Introduced 2025-02-06
Legislative timeline
2025-02-06 · house · IntroReferral
Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committee on the Judiciary, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
2025-02-06 · house · IntroReferral
Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committee on the Judiciary, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
2025-02-06 · IntroReferral
Introduced in House
2025-02-06 · IntroReferral
Introduced in House
Citizen comments
Sign in to comment on this bill.
No comments yet — be the first.