Skip Navigation

Businesses contribute $3 million to fight opioid epidemic in Blair County

State of Emergency logo body embed.JPG

Newsrooms across the commonwealth have spent years documenting the opioid crisis in their own communities. But now, in the special project State of Emergency: Searching for Solutions to Pennsylvania’s Opioids Crisis, we are marshalling resources to spotlight what Pennsylvanians are doing to try to reverse the soaring number of overdose deaths.

WITF is releasing more than 60 stories, videos and photos throughout July. This week, you will find stories about education, prevention and community support.

Asked why he started a non-profit to tackle a surge in heroin use and its accompanying violence, Altoona businessman Michael Fiore has a simple answer.

“You can either put your head in the sand and ignore it or pull your head out and do something about it,” said Fiore, CEO and president of the family contracting company Leonard S. Fiore Inc.

“I got sick and tired of seeing on the front page of the newspaper gun violence and shootings and the overdoses,” said Fiore, who in 2006 rallied local businesses and individuals to fund and create the non-profit organization Operation Our Town by getting two dozen businesses to contribute $10,000 per year for three years.

Fiore said he remembered Altoona as a far different place than it had become by the mid-2000s, when effects of heroin use escalated.

Overdoses, daytime shootings and appearances of gang members running organized drug operations threatened the quality of life in this once safe, working class city in central Pennsylvania.

Operation Our Town, initially, was a way to give local police more resources to go after drug dealers and make the job safer for officers.It started when Fiore told Altoona police to buy eight armored vests and send him the bill.

Between 2007-17, the organization provided $3,084,865 in grants for law enforcement, treatment and prevention programs in Blair County to address the drug problem largely caused by heroin and other opioids.

Altoona police Sgt. Chris Moser said funding from the organization has allowed the department to expand its drug investigations, both in numbers and scale. It also funds a full-time drug prosecutor through a grant to Blair County.

“Operation Our Town has played a large role in cleaning up what is going on here,” said Moser, who pointed out the funding goes to pay for police overtime, training and equipment.

Moser said if one wants to see the difference Operation Our Town has made they only need to look to nearby Johnstown in Cambria County, where in 2017 there were eight homicides, all shootings. In 2017, Altoona had no homicides.

The organization also sees treatment and prevention as part of the equation.

Gloria Gates Memorial Foundation Executive Director Toni Bilik said grants from Operation Our Town made it possible to expand the existing after school program from just one location to three.

The grants go to physical expenses – school supplies, sports equipment, field trips – for the after school program, serving about 120 kids each year. Professional staff helps the kids with homework, gives them a snack and do activities to expand their world, build character and teach them life skills.

“Along with that, we talk about risky behavior, such as alcohol and drug abuse – even smoking,” Bilik said. “The kids are well-versed about what that can do to their life.”

Kids who were in trouble or headed for trouble, she said, have come back to tell her the after school program changed their lives.

Fiore said while no approach will get the number of drug arrests or overdoses to zero, Operation Our Town will continue to support those in the community whose work has made a difference.

“It’s not just unique in the state,” Fiore said. “It’s unique in the country.”

Support for WITF is provided by:

Become a WITF sponsor today »

Support for WITF is provided by:

Become a WITF sponsor today »

Up Next
Regional & State News

Abortion politics may shadow final weeks of governor's race