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Ohio Community Leaders Considering Billion-Dollar Opioid Deal

OxyContin pills are arranged for a photo at a pharmacy in Montpelier, Vermont.
Toby Talbot
/
AP
OxyContin pills are arranged for a photo at a pharmacy in Montpelier, Vermont.

Community leaders around Ohio are weighing whether to sign on to . They鈥檙e going over the specifics as they consider their final decisions, which could bring big money but some fear could also be costly.

Ohio stands to get a good-sized chunk of between some 4,000 entities and distributors McKesson, AmerisourceBergen and Dublin-based Cardinal Health, along with drug maker Johnson & Johnson.

鈥淚t'll be about a billion dollars. That's serious money," said Republican Attorney General Dave Yost. 

Yost said the distributors will pay a total of $21 billion over 17 years, with J&J paying up to $5 billion. A substantial portion of the money must go to opioid treatment and addiction prevention.

The next step is for states and communities to decide whether to sign on, since the payout amounts from those four companies depend on the number of entities that agree to take the money and halt future legal action. The companies can also walk away from the deal or pay a lot less money if they aren鈥檛 happy with the number of states and communities that have agreed to the settlement.

City and county leaders from around the state got together a few days after the settlement was announced to talk about it.

Dayton was one of the first cities in the country to sue over the opioid crisis, going after more than a dozen pharmaceutical companies, distributors and pain specialists. At that time in 2017, Montgomery County led the nation in opioid deaths. So getting to this point is a big deal for Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, but she鈥檚 still cautious.

鈥淔rom what we heard, high level, it sounds pretty good about trying to get everybody to come together but we just have to make sure," Whaley said. "These are people who have done a pretty big disservice to our communities and so until we see it in writing, we鈥檙e not going to say yes, we鈥檙e going to sign on.鈥

Last year that 55% of the money would go to the statewide One Ohio foundation, 30% would go to local recovery programs and 15% to the state.

Whaley, a Democrat running for governor next year, said she wants more details about the foundation 鈥 for instance, who will be on the board and how it will be regulated.

Republican Shelby County Commissioner Julie Ehmann was at that meeting after the settlement was announced, and she likes the position the deal puts Ohio in.

鈥淲e were approached with a formula that would put Ohio in front of other states in the country when they rolled out this national plan. So there鈥檚 some hoops to jump through and they need to get a lot of buy in from other counties and municipalities," Ehmann said. "So they do know that there鈥檚 a bar that鈥檚 been set kind of high for us to kind of jump in line ahead of the rest.鈥

Findlay Mayor Christina Muryn, also a Republican, said it鈥檚 still early, but she thinks her city will sign on and will encourage other leaders to join as well.

Muryn said this one-time money will allow communities to create investments that can be sustained with operating funds, and there鈥檚 a broad definition of what the money can be spent on.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to provide flexibility because every community has slightly different needs and had a slightly different impact, but overall want to make sure the money is going for its intended purpose," Muryn said. "And I believe that the proposal does do that.鈥

Hanging over the discussions is between 46 states and major tobacco companies in 1998.

Ohio was supposed to get $10 billion. Much of it was diverted to a budget deficit, school construction and a stimulus package, and in 2007 the state traded $8 billion in future payments for a one-time check of $5 billion. So within 10 years, Ohio was left with nearly no money from the tobacco settlement for anti-smoking efforts.

And Ohio wasn鈥檛 the only state 鈥 among the projects that were funded with tobacco settlement money were a golf course sprinkler system in New York, renovation of shipping docks in Alaska and a tobacco museum in North Carolina.

Yost said that One Ohio agreement will guarantee the money will go dealing with the past damage and future issues caused by opioids.

But many officials agree with Whaley, they want to ensure the companies are being held accountable, and they want to know the money won鈥檛 be used to plug budget holes or special projects.

鈥淲e鈥檝e heard this 鈥 we want to see it," Whaley said.

Ehmann said she鈥檚 also waiting to hear more details, but adds that being too cautious could be costly.

鈥淭he longer we delay, the longer the crisis just continues and the more people that suffer," Ehmann said.

The companies don鈥檛 admit to wrongdoing in the settlement.

States have 30 days to decide whether to sign onto it. Local governments have five months after that.

people died of opioid overdoses between 2010 and 2019. The worst year for deadly opioid overdoses was 2017, when 4,162 people died - that's more than 11 people a day. when the final numbers are tabulated for 2020.

Copyright 2021 The Statehouse News Bureau. To see more, visit .

Karen Kasler
Contact Karen at 614/578-6375 or at kkasler@statehousenews.org.
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