Michael P. Botticelli (born January 2, 1958) is an American public official. He serves as the Director of the White HouseOffice of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), serving as acting director after the March 2014 resignation of Gil Kerlikowske, and receiving confirmation from the United States Senate in February 2015. Prior to joining ONDCP, he worked in the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.
Botticelli was raised in Waterford, New York,[1] in a family with a history of alcoholism.[2][3] He received a Bachelor's Degree in psychology from Siena College and a Masters in Education from St. Lawrence University.[4]
Botticelli began drinking alcohol regularly in his junior year of high school. By his 20s, he was an alcoholic.[2] He also experimented with cocaine and marijuana.[1] He was arrested for driving under the influence following a traffic collision on the Massachusetts Turnpike in 1988.[2] A judge gave him the option of going into treatment or being sentenced to prison, and he chose to enter treatment.[3]
After achieving sobriety, Botticelli joined the Massachusetts Department of Public Health in 1994. He worked as a coordinator for alcoholism programs from 1994 through 1995, as contract manager for HIV-related policies and services from 1995 through 1996, as an assistant director for policy and planning from 1996 through 2000, as the chief of staff to the public health commissioner from 2000 through 2003, and as director of substance abuse services from 2003 to 2012.[5] In the latter role, he oversaw the pilot program for Quincy, Massachusetts, police to begin carrying naloxone to treat opioidoverdose, and the expansion of substance abuse treatment services in community health centers.[2][5]
Gil Kerlikowske, serving as the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) under PresidentBarack Obama, met Botticelli on a visit to Massachusetts, and asked him to serve as deputy director. In March 2014, following Kerlikowske's confirmation as Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Botticelli became acting director. He is the first director of the ONDCP to be in recovery for substance use.[2] The United States Senate confirmed Botticelli in February 2015 by a vote of 92-0.[6] As director of ONDCP, Botticelli has advocated to expand the usage of naloxone, improved education for providers around prescription painkillers, and providing clean syringes for injection drug users to limit the spread of HIV and Hepatitis C.[1]
Botticelli is a member of the National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse Directors. He is a former advisory committee member of the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention and the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention.[7]
Botticelli is openly gay and married.[2] He and his partner have dated since 1995, and were married in 2009.[8]