Longtime Multnomah County administrator appointed new Measure 110 executive director

The Oregon Health Authority headquarters in Portland. The agency has hired a new executive director for its Measure 110 program, which funds drug addiction treatment services and programs statewide. (Oregon Health Authority)

Abbey Stamp is taking on a new role that will put her at the heart of Oregon’s fentanyl overdose crisis – and the next chapter of the state’s effort to combat drug addiction.

The 51-year-old longtime Multnomah County administrator will start Oct. 15 as the new executive director of the Oregon Health Authority’s Measure 110 program. Stamp is taking the helm at a time when Measure 110 has reached a crossroads since Oregon voters passed it in 2020 to decriminalize low-level drug possession and plow millions into programs for drug users. The state will recriminalize low-level drug possession on Sept. 1 as counties establish deflection programs to divert people to treatment.

For the last 11 years, Stamp has been executive director of Multnomah County’s Local Public Safety Coordinating Council, which works on criminal justice reform issues and policies in the state’s largest county.

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