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How Are States Spending Opioid Settlement Cash? We Built a Database of Answers
Two people are photographed in front of bookshelves. A seated man with a bushy gray beard looks off-camera to his right while a woman stands, leaning against the chair, and looks at the camera.
John Greene and his counselor Emily Georgia at Family & Children鈥檚 Counseling Services in Cortland, New York. (Celia Talbot Tobin for 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)
Payback: Tracking Opioid Cash

How Are States Spending Opioid Settlement Cash? We Built a Database of Answers

In the past few years, state and local governments across the U.S. have begun spending paid by companies accused of fueling the overdose crisis. But where is that money going, who is getting it, and is it doing any good?

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News, partnering with researchers at the and , a national nonprofit focused on addiction, undertook a yearlong investigation to find out.

Dozens of interviews, thousands of pages of documents, an array of public records requests, and outreach to all 50 states resulted in a first-of-its kind database that catalogs more than 7,000 ways opioid settlement cash was used in 2022 and 2023. It鈥檚 the most comprehensive resource to date tracking some of the largest public health settlements in American history.

Among the findings:

  • States and localities received more than $6 billion in opioid settlement funds in 2022 and 2023. According to public records, they spent or committed about a third of that amount and set aside about another third for future use. The final third was untrackable, as many jurisdictions did not produce public reports on the funds.
  • Reports of spending tracked the minuscule to the monumental, from in Yavapai County, Arizona, to to increase the addiction treatment workforce in California.
  • States allotted, on average, about 18% of their funds for addiction and mental health treatment; 14% for recovery services such as housing, transportation, and legal aid; 11% for harm reduction efforts such as overdose reversal medications; and 9% for prevention programs that aim to stop people from developing substance use disorders. States committed, on average, about 2% for syringe service programs, through which people can get sterile needles. (A variety of entities received this money, from law enforcement to nonprofit organizations to government agencies.)
  • Governments reported spending more than $240 million on purposes that did not qualify as opioid remediation. (Most settlements allow states to spend up to 15% of their funds this way.) Most of this tranche went to legal fees, but several jurisdictions funneled money to their general fund. One county even sent funds to its road and bridge department.
  • Several cities and counties reported expenditures they said addressed the overdose crisis but that would leave an average person scratching their head 鈥 to an anti-abortion pregnancy center in Sandborn, Indiana, and for heart disease in Oregon City, Oregon.

鈥淲hen people know that people aren鈥檛 watching and there鈥檚 no accountability, then they can kind of do what they want,鈥 said , a community activist in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, who is in recovery. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we have to have some kind of database and accountability.鈥

Despite the in overall overdose deaths in the U.S., still died in the 12 months ending July 2024 and rates in many .

鈥淲e can鈥檛 mess up or miss this moment,鈥 Myles said.

Opioid settlement payouts are expected to over nearly two decades, paid by more than a dozen companies that made or distributed prescription painkillers, including Johnson & Johnson, Walgreens, and Walmart. Although it鈥檚 a large sum, it鈥檚 dwarfed by the size of the crisis, making each dollar that鈥檚 spent critical.

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News and its partners reviewed hundreds of settlement spending reports, extracting expenditures line by line, and developed a methodology to sort the expenditures into categories like treatment or prevention. States were given an opportunity to review the data and comment on their spending.

To be sure, the database does not capture the full picture of opioid settlement spending nationwide. Some places do not publish spending reports, while others declined to engage with this project. The data presented here is a snapshot as of the end of 2023 and does not account for further spending in 2024. The differences in how states control, process, and report on the money make apples-to-apples comparisons nearly impossible. Still, the database helps fill a gap left by a lack of national reporting requirements and federal government inaction.

It is 鈥渁 tool for those who want to objectively measure whether everything that can be done is being done,鈥 said Matthew Myers, a former president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, which on tobacco settlement money.

Treatment a Clear Winner

The top priority to emerge from early opioid settlement spending was treatment, with more than $416 million spent or committed to residential rehabs, outpatient counseling, medications for opioid use disorder, and more.

The state of New York 鈥 which spent the most on treatment 鈥 allocated about $22 million of that for programs that make the for care as easy as possible for patients: providing same-day prescriptions for buprenorphine, a medication that decreases cravings for opioids.

The result was a program that John Greene said changed his life.

Greene, 57, used to live in the woods down the street from Family & Children鈥檚 Counseling Services in Cortland, New York. He cycled through jails and hospitals, overdosing half a dozen times and trying rehab just as many.

But now he has four months of recovery under his belt 鈥 the longest stint since he started regularly using drugs at 14.

A man with a bushy gray beard in a jacked and cap stands outside a building and smokes a cigarette while looking at the camera.
Greene is four months into recovery and he credits a new program that Family & Children鈥檚 Counseling Services started with opioid settlement money. (Celia Talbot Tobin for 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

He said it鈥檚 because the counseling center鈥檚 鈥 funded by a mix of state and local opioid settlement dollars 鈥 has a different approach. Counselors aren鈥檛 didactic and judgmental. They don鈥檛 force him to stop smoking marijuana. Several staff members have experienced addiction themselves. They drive Greene, who doesn鈥檛 have a car, to doctor appointments and the pharmacy for his buprenorphine prescription.

Now Greene lives and works with his brother, looks forward to weekly counseling sessions, and is notching small victories 鈥 such as buying his nephew toy cars as a stocking stuffer.

鈥淚t made me feel good to do something for somebody and not expect nothing back,” Greene said.

, one of Greene鈥檚 counselors, said the center has worked with nearly 200 people like him in the past year. Without the settlements, 鈥渢he program probably wouldn鈥檛 exist,鈥 she said.

A smiling man with a bushy gray beard stands, leaning against a desk, while a woman sit in a desk chair behind him with her legs crossed.
Emily Georgia, one of Greene鈥檚 counselors, said the center has worked with nearly 200 people like him in the past year. (Celia Talbot Tobin for 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

Across the country, the money supports other innovative treatment approaches:

  • $21 million for in Kentucky that diverts people with mental illness or addiction who face low-level charges away from incarceration and into treatment, education, and workforce training
  • More than $3 million for, in part, in Massachusetts, to bring the medication to rural and underserved areas
  • Tens of thousands of dollars each in and to cover out-of-pocket treatment costs for people without insurance or those with high deductibles

, an expert on substance use disorder at the National Council for Mental Wellbeing, said these efforts 鈥渁re really positive鈥 and many have been 鈥渉istorically difficult or impossible to achieve with federal or state funding.鈥

But some funds are also flowing to treatment approaches that defy best practices, such as denying people medications for opioid use disorder.

consider methadone and buprenorphine a crutch. But study after study show that the medications help people and reduce the . that treatment without these medications can be more harmful than no treatment at all.

Although not everyone will want medication, settlement funds shouldn鈥檛 鈥減rop up a system that doesn鈥檛 allow people to have that choice,鈥 said , a professor of addiction policy at Georgetown University.

Babies, Forgotten Victims of the Epidemic

While treatment received a windfall in early opioid settlement spending, another aspect of the crisis was neglected: , a condition in which babies exposed to drugs in the womb experience withdrawal.

Nationwide, more than are diagnosed with it. Yet only about $8.4 million in settlement money was committed to the issue 鈥 less than 0.5% of all funds publicly reported as spent or committed in 2022 and 2023.

Experts in public health and addiction, as well as affected families, say it鈥檚 due to stigma.

鈥淎 mom using drugs and being a parent is a very uncomfortable reality to face,鈥 said Ashley Grant, a 38-year-old mother of three in Mesa, Arizona. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easier to just push it under the rug or let them fall through the cracks, as sad as that is.鈥

It almost happened to her.

Grant learned she was pregnant with her third child last year. At the time, her partner was in jail and she was using drugs after an eight-year period of recovery, was estranged from her family, and didn鈥檛 know how she鈥檇 survive the next nine months.

During a visit to a methadone clinic, she saw a booth about , a specialty nursery that cares for substance-exposed newborns and their moms. Nursery staff connected her with a therapist, helped her enroll in parenting classes, and dropped off diapers and a playpen at her home.

A close-up image of a nurse holding a stethoscope to baby's chest. The unidentifiable baby is wrapped in a pink cloth with a pattern of  Santa, reindeer, trees, and snowflakes.
Registered nurse Ashley Beikmann checks over an infant who recently arrived at Jacob鈥檚 Hope, a specialty nursery in Mesa, Arizona, that helps care for substance-exposed newborns and their parents.(Ash Ponders for 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

After delivering at the hospital, Grant and her baby boy stayed at Jacob鈥檚 Hope for about a week. Nurses showed her how skin-to-skin contact calmed his withdrawal symptoms and more frequent feedings and burpings decreased gastrointestinal discomfort, which is common among substance-exposed newborns.

Today, Grant has roughly five months of recovery. She got certified as a peer recovery specialist and hopes to join Jacob鈥檚 Hope one day to help moms like her.

But the nursery鈥檚 future is uncertain.

After opening in 2019, Jacob鈥檚 Hope this summer due to low reimbursements and delayed payments from insurers, said , its associate director. Community donations kept the nursery afloat, but 鈥渋t鈥檚 still hanging on by a thread,鈥 she said.

She鈥檚 hoping opioid settlement money can help.

Two women stand in front of a large flowering bush with their hands clasped. One wears a pink shirt that reads "Jacob's Hope" and the other wears a dark gray sweater.
Jo Jones (left) is the founder of Jacob鈥檚 Hope and Lyndsey Steele (right) is the nursery鈥檚 associate director. (Ash Ponders for 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

In 2022, Jacob鈥檚 Hope from Arizona’s opioid settlements. But this year, the legislature captured the state鈥檚 share of remaining funds and, in , gave it to the Department of Corrections.

Jacob鈥檚 Hope has now turned to local governments, which control their own settlement dollars. Its home city of Mesa said a first round of grant applications should open in the spring.

Steele prays it won鈥檛 be too late for babies in need 鈥 the epidemic鈥檚 鈥渇orgotten victims,鈥 she called them.

A view of a room through the window in the door with a bed, armchair and changing table. A woman sits on the bed and looks down at the infant in her arms.
A certified nursing assistant comforts an infant who recently arrived at Jacob鈥檚 Hope.(Ash Ponders for 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

Heart Disease Screening, Robot Ambulances, and More

Some opioid settlement expenditures have sparked fierce disagreement. They generally fall into three buckets: money for law enforcement, funding for youth prevention programs, and purchases unrelated to the opioid crisis.

Settlement dollars nationwide have bought body scanners, , , , and for police and sheriffs.

Some spending strayed even further from the spirit of the settlement. In Oregon City, Oregon, was spent on screening first responders for heart disease. Police Chief Shaun Davis said his staff respond to opioid-related emergencies and experience trauma that increases their risk of heart attack.

But some people question if settlement funds should be footing the bill.

鈥淭his looks to me like you鈥檙e trying to defray other costs鈥 from the police budget, said , chair of Tennessee鈥檚 Opioid Abatement Council. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that there鈥檚 any way that this opioid money was earmarked for stuff like that.鈥

A second area of contention is youth prevention.

Although most people agree that stopping children from developing addictions is important, the execution is tricky.

Nearly half a million settlement dollars have gone to the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program, commonly known as D.A.R.E. suggest its original curriculum .

Robeson County, North Carolina, spent about $10,000 in settlement money to buy 鈥,鈥 a robot ambulance with big eyes and an audio system through which a human operator can discuss the dangers of drugs. EMS Director Patrick Cummings said his team has taken the robot to churches and elementary schools.

We 鈥渄on鈥檛 have any studies that show it鈥檚 working,鈥 he said, but educating kids seems like a good investment because 鈥渋f they never try it, they don鈥檛 get addicted.鈥

A screenshot of a Robotronics webpage for "Any the Ambulance" with a picture of the robot. The price for the robot is shown as $10,329.00 and its description reads: "Andy the Ambulance鈩 is a remote control ambulance. Andy is an innovative and effective way to teach hazard awareness, injury prevention, and EMS promotion. Andy is a fully animated, industrial-grade safety education robot; he moves, carries on a 2-way conversation, plays music, and activates his lights and siren, all by remote control! Andy comes equipped with a working rear door and his warning lights flash just like a real ambulance. He can wink, blink, and move his eyes, and with his smiling mouth, he presents a positive and friendly image to young and old alike."
Robeson County, North Carolina, used about $10,000 of settlement funds to buy 鈥淎ndy the Ambulance,鈥 a robot ambulance with big eyes and an audio system through which a human operator can speak. EMS Director Patrick Cummings said his team has taken it to churches and elementary schools to discuss the dangers of using drugs with kids. (杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News screenshot of robotronics.com)

Then there鈥檚 the chunk of money 鈥 up to 15% of each state鈥檚 funds 鈥 that鈥檚 a free-for-all.

Flint, Michigan, spent nearly $10,000 on a sign for a community service center. The city did not qualify as 鈥渙pioid remediation.鈥 In other words, it鈥檚 unrelated to addressing the crisis.

But Caitie O鈥橬eill, a city spokesperson, said that 鈥渢he building sign makes it possible for residents to find鈥 the center, which houses city services, 鈥渋ncluding Narcan kits, fentanyl testing strips, and substance abuse referrals.鈥

The sign above a building entrance reads "Police Community Service & Payment Center".
The city of Flint, Michigan, spent nearly $10,000 of settlement funds on a building sign. The city reported it as a non-opioid remediation expense. (Caitie O鈥橬eill)

Jurisdictions across 29 states reported non-remediation spending in 2022 and 2023. Most opioid settlements require such reports but operate on an honor system. No one is checking if the other 21 states and Washington, D.C., were truthful.

Jackie Lewis, an Ohio mother whose 34-year-old son, Shaun, died of an overdose in October 2022, finds that hard to stomach.

鈥淭his is blood money,鈥 she said. Some people have 鈥渓ost sight of that.鈥

Lewis is raising Shaun鈥檚 daughter, ensuring the 9-year-old receives counseling at school and can attend the hip-hop music classes she enjoys 鈥 all on Lewis鈥 Social Security payments. This year they moved to a smaller town with lower costs.

As settlement funds continue flowing, she wants officials in charge of the money to help families like hers.

鈥淲e still exist and we鈥檙e still struggling,鈥 she said.

A woman stands outside with her arms around her granddaughter and looks at the camera. The girl's face is turned away from the camera.
Jackie Lewis lost her 34-year old son, Shaun, in October 2022 to an opioid overdose. She is raising Shaun鈥檚 daughter, now 9 years old, on her Social Security payments. Lewis wants officials in charge of settlement funds to help families like hers. 鈥淲e still exist and we鈥檙e still struggling,鈥 she says. (Maddie McGarvey for 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News’ Henry Larweh and Megan Kalata, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Sara Whaley and Vivian Flanagan, and Shatterproof’s Kristen Pendergrass and Sahvanah Prescott contributed to this article.

The has taken a leading role in providing guidance to state and local governments on the use of opioid settlement funds. Faculty from the school collaborated with other experts in the field to create , which have been endorsed by over 60 organizations.

is a national nonprofit that addresses substance use disorder through distinct initiatives, including advocating for state and federal policies, ending addiction stigma, and educating communities about the treatment system.

Shatterproof is partnering with some states on projects funded by opioid settlements. 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News, the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and the Shatterproof team who worked on this report are not involved in those efforts.