SACRAMENTO 鈥 Sonja Verdugo lost her husband to an opioid overdose last year. She regularly delivers medical supplies to people using drugs who are living 鈥 and dying 鈥 on the streets of Los Angeles. And she advocates at Los Angeles City Hall for policies to address addiction and homelessness.
Yet Verdugo didn’t know that hundreds of millions of dollars annually are flowing to California communities to combat the opioid crisis, a payout that began in 2022 and continues through 2038.
The money comes from pharmaceutical companies that made, distributed, or sold prescription opioid painkillers and that agreed to pay about $50 billion nationwide to settle lawsuits over their role in the overdose epidemic. Even though a recent Supreme Court decision upended a settlement with OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma, many other companies have already begun paying out and will continue doing so for years.
California, the most populous state, is in line for .
鈥淵ou can walk down the street and you see someone addicted on every corner 鈥 I mean it’s just everywhere,鈥 Verdugo said. 鈥淎nd I’ve never even heard of the funds. And to me, that’s crazy.鈥
Across the nation, much of this windfall has been shrouded in secrecy, with many jurisdictions offering little transparency on how they鈥檙e spending the money, despite repeated queries from people in recovery and families who lost loved ones to addiction.
Meanwhile, there鈥檚 plenty of jockeying over how the money should be used. Companies are lobbying for spending on products that range from medication bottles that lock to full-body scanners to screen people entering jails. Local officials are often advocating for the fields they represent, whether it鈥檚 treatment, prevention, or harm reduction. And some governments are using it to plug budget gaps.
In California, local governments how they spend settlement funds to the state鈥檚 Department of Health Care Services, but there鈥檚 no requirement that the reports be made public.
天天看片 Health News obtained copies of the documents via a public records request and is now making available for the first time 265 spending reports from local governments for fiscal year 2022-23, the most recent reports filed.
The reports provide a snapshot of the early spending priorities, and tensions.
Naloxone an Early Winner
As of June 2023, the bulk of opioid settlement funds controlled by California cities and counties 鈥 more than $200 million 鈥 had yet to be spent, the reports show. It鈥檚 a theme echoed nationwide as officials take time to deliberate.
The and of Los Angeles accounted for nearly one-fifth of that unspent total, nearly $39 million, though officials say that since the report was filed they鈥檝e begun allocating the money to recovery housing and programs to connect people who are homeless with residential addiction treatment.
Among local governments that did use the cash in the first fiscal year, the most popular object of spending was naloxone, a medication that reverses opioid overdoses and is often known by the brand name Narcan. The medication accounted for more than $2 million in spending across 19 projects.
One of those projects was in Union City, in the San Francisco Bay Area. The community of about 72,000 residents had , two of them fatal, within 24 hours in September.
The opioid settlement money 鈥渨as invaluable,鈥 Corina Hahn, the city鈥檚 director of community and recreation services, . 鈥淗aving these resources available helped educate, train and distribute the Narcan kits to parents, youth and school staff.鈥
Union City bought 500 kits, each containing two doses of naloxone. The kits cost about $13,500, with an additional $56,000 set aside for similar projects, including backpacks containing Narcan kits and training materials for high school students.
Union City also plans to expand its outreach to homeless people to fund drug education and recovery services, including addiction counseling.
Those are the sorts of lifesaving services that Verdugo, the Los Angeles advocate, said are desperately needed as deaths of people living on the streets pile up.
She lost her 46-year-old husband, Jesse Baumgartner, in June of last year to an addiction that started after he was prescribed pain medications for a high school wrestling injury. He tried kicking his habit for six years using methadone, but each time prescribers lowered his dosage the cravings drove him back to illicit drugs.
鈥淚t was just this horrible roller coaster of him not being able to get off of it,鈥 Verdugo said.
By then the couple had survived 4陆 years of being homeless and had been in stable housing for about two years.
Fentanyl use, particularly among homeless people, 鈥渋s just rampant,鈥 she said. People sometimes are initially exposed to the cheap, highly addictive substance unknowingly when it is mixed with something else.
鈥淥nce they start using it, it's like they just can't backtrack,鈥 said Verdugo, who works as a community organizer for .
So she leaves boxes of naloxone at homeless encampments in the hope of saving lives.
鈥淭hey definitely use it, because it's needed right then 鈥 they can't wait for an ambulance to come out,鈥 she said.
Cities Backtrack on Spending for Law Enforcement
By contrast, the cities of and , both in Greater Los Angeles, listed plans to prioritize law enforcement by buying , though neither city did so in the first fiscal year, 2022-23. Their inclination mirrored patterns elsewhere in the country, with millions in settlement funds flowing to police departments and jails.
But such uses of the money have stirred controversy, and both cities backed away from the drug analyzer purchase after the Department of Health Care Services that opioid settlement funds may not be used for certain law enforcement efforts. The rules specifically excluded 鈥渆quipment for the purpose of evidence gathering for prosecution, such as the TruNarc Handheld Narcotics Analyzer.鈥
In Hawthorne, also near Los Angeles, the police department had already spent about $25,000 of settlement funds on an initial installment to buy 80 BolaWraps, to wrap around a person鈥檚 limbs or torso.
After the state said BolaWraps were not an allowable expense, the city said it would find other funding sources to pay the remaining installments.
鈥楾hey See a Cash Cow鈥: Corporations Could Consume $50 Billion of Opioid Settlements
As opioid settlement dollars land in government coffers, a swarm of businesses are positioning themselves to profit from the windfall. But will their potential gains come at the expense of the settlements鈥 intended purpose 鈥 to remediate the effects of the opioid epidemic?
Read MoreSanta Rosa, in California鈥檚 wine country, on police officer wellness and support.
The funds allowed the police department to boost its from a part-time to a full-time position, and to buy a mobile machine to measure electrical activity in the brain, said Sgt. Patricia Seffens, a spokesperson.
The goal is to use the technology on police officers to help 鈥渁ssess the traumatic impact of responding to the increasing overdose calls,鈥 Seffens said in an email.
In Dublin, east of San Francisco, officials are using part of their $62,000 in settlement cash for a D.A.R.E. program.
D.A.R.E., which stands for , is a series of classes taught by police officers in schools to encourage students to resist peer pressure and avoid drugs. It was initially developed during the 鈥淛ust Say No鈥 campaign in the 1980s.
Studies have found from the program and on drug use, leading many researchers to dismiss it as 鈥.鈥
But on its website, D.A.R.E. cites studies since the program was updated in 2009, which found 鈥溾 on fifth graders and 鈥溾 in drinking and smoking about four months after completing the program.
鈥淭he D.A.R.E. program when it first came out looks a lot, lot different than what it looks like right now,鈥 said Nate Schmidt, the Dublin police chief.
Schmidt said additional settlement money will be used to distribute naloxone to residents and stock it at schools and city facilities.
Other local governments in California spent modest sums on a wide range of addiction-related measures. Ukiah, in Mendocino County, north of San Francisco, for a new heating and air conditioning system for a local drug treatment center. and counties spent settlement funds in part on medication-assisted treatment for people incarcerated in their jails. The city of Oceanside to showcase drug prevention art and videos made by middle school students in local movie theaters, in public spaces, and on buses and taxis.
The Department of Health Care Services said it plans to release a statewide report on how the funds were spent, as well as the individual city and county reports, by year鈥檚 end.
This article was produced by 天天看片 Health News, a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at 鈥 the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.