The Opioid Settlement Funds: What They Mean for Your Community
The Opioid Settlement Funds: What They Mean for Your Community
Billions in opioid settlement money are flowing to states and communities. Here is what you need to know about where it is going — and whether it is reaching the people who need it most.
Where the Money Comes From
Pharmaceutical manufacturers (like Johnson & Johnson, Teva, and Allergan), distributors (McKesson, Cardinal Health, AmerisourceBergen), and pharmacy chains (Walmart, Walgreens, CVS) have reached settlements with state and local governments for their role in the opioid crisis.
These funds are intended to remediate the damage caused by the opioid epidemic — not to supplement general budgets.
How Settlement Funds Should Be Used
Most settlement agreements include approved use categories:
- Treatment and recovery services: Expanding access to MAT, residential treatment, and IOP programs
- Harm reduction: Fentanyl test strips, Narcan distribution, and syringe service programs
- Prevention and education: Community awareness campaigns and school-based prevention
- Recovery support: Sober housing, employment services, and peer support
- Criminal justice diversion: Drug court programs and jail-based treatment
The Accountability Challenge
History offers a cautionary tale: most tobacco settlement funds were diverted to non-health purposes. Advocates are fighting to ensure opioid funds reach addiction services. Organizations like Johns Hopkins Bloomberg American Health Initiative track settlement spending for transparency.
What You Can Do
- Attend local government meetings where settlement fund allocation is discussed
- Advocate for evidence-based spending: treatment, harm reduction, and recovery services
- Contact your county commissioners or city council about how funds are being used
- Connect with local advocacy groups pushing for accountable spending
You Are Not Alone. Help Is Closer Than You Think.
Red Door Recovery Network connects you to over 39,000 treatment providers across all 50 states. Whether you are taking your first step or starting again, the right door is waiting for you.
SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) | Crisis Lifeline: 988
More Recovery Resources from Red Door
- Community Meetings Directory — Find AA, NA, SMART Recovery, Al-Anon, and Celebrate Recovery meetings
- Meetings Blog — Articles about recovery meetings and what to expect
- Peer Support Specialists — Connect with certified recovery coaches
- Harm Reduction Agencies — Naloxone, needle exchange, and overdose prevention
- Food Pantries — Free food assistance for those in need