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Money set aside to help NH's opioid crisis could be steered elsewhere in the state budget

Photos of people lost to drug overdoses at a vigil in front of New Hampshire's Statehouse in 2022.
Paul Cuno-Booth
/
NHPR
Photos of people lost to drug addiction at an overdose-awareness vigil in front of New Hampshire's Statehouse in 2022.

New Hampshire lawmakers have proposed diverting millions of dollars meant to address opioid addiction to help close the state鈥檚 budget gaps 鈥 alarming advocates who say it would upend a wide range of treatment, recovery and prevention programs.

At the same time, some advocates are also raising concerns about a separate plan from Gov. Kelly Ayotte to use some of the opioid settlement money for law enforcement activities in the North Country.

At issue is the state鈥檚 , which is funded by a series of legal settlements with drug companies accused of fueling a wave of opioid addiction. Under the settlement terms, that money must be used to address the opioid crisis.

The House budget plan that was finalized earlier this month includes plans to withdraw $21.4 million from that fund over two years, ultimately in order to fund other state expenses not related to opioid treatment, prevention or recovery.

The lawmaker who came up with that plan told NHPR he wasn鈥檛 fully informed about legal restrictions on that money until after the House budget was finalized. He now says the Senate 鈥 which is now in control of the budget process 鈥 should put the money back in the opioid fund.

It鈥檚 unclear how the Senate will proceed, but the governor and other top state officials are also calling for the money to be restored.

The debate over this funding reflects a broader concern : that cash-strapped state governments will use opioid settlement funds to plug budget holes or steer the money toward law enforcement, rather than strengthening treatment and recovery services.


Earlier coverage:


Backfilling the alcohol fund with the opioid fund

New Hampshire depends on a mix of funding sources to pay for substance use services. Two key pools of money are the , funded with settlement payments, and the , which receives a portion of state liquor sale profits.

The final version of the House budget takes $10.7 million per year from the alcohol fund to address the state鈥檚 overall revenue shortfall. Then it backfills the alcohol fund with the same amount from the opioid fund.

The net effect is a $10.7 million annual cut to substance use funding overall, but the problems go beyond that, said Kate Frey, the vice president of advocacy for the health policy organization New Futures.

鈥淚t really would disrupt the whole system,鈥 Frey said.

Because opioid settlement money can only be used to address opioid use, the alcohol fund would have to stop funding services for people dealing with alcohol or stimulant misuse. Meanwhile, another provision in the House budget would cancel any grants awarded by the opioid fund with effective dates on or after May 1.

That would cut off funding to a number of existing programs supported by the opioid fund. Earlier this month, the state renewed to nonprofits and local governments working to improve access to treatment, provide recovery housing, steer youth away from substance use and expand the behavioral health workforce, among other efforts. Because those contract extensions are effective May 4, they would be canceled under the House budget.

The opioid fund is also a key funding source for New Hampshire鈥檚 network of peer-led recovery centers and other efforts to build more recovery housing.

'So unfortunately, we passed a provision that the Senate needs to remove.'
Rep. Jess Edwards, who oversaw the plan to reshuffled the substance use funds

Rep. Jess Edwards, who oversaw the plan to reshuffle the substance use funds, said he saw it a way to shore up the general fund 鈥 while still using what he described as 鈥渁n excess of opioid abatement funds鈥 to support the alcohol fund.

Edwards, an Auburn Republican, said legislative staff assured him it was legal. He said it wasn鈥檛 until last week 鈥 after the House budget had passed 鈥 that the attorney general鈥檚 office informed him those funds couldn鈥檛 legally go to non-opioid-related programs.

鈥淪o unfortunately, we passed a provision that the Senate needs to remove,鈥 Edwards said.

But key stakeholders had raised those very concerns with lawmakers before the House budget was final 鈥 including the chair of the Governor鈥檚 Commission on Alcohol and Other Drugs, which oversees the alcohol fund.

鈥淧roposed shifts in how the Governor鈥檚 Commission is funded eliminates our ability to meet the needs of citizens struggling with alcohol, simulants, methamphetamines and other non-opioid substances,鈥 the chair, Patrick Tufts, wrote in an April 4 letter to House and Senate leadership.

The commission overseeing the Opioid Abatement Trust Fund 鈥 which is led by an official from the New Hampshire Attorney General鈥檚 Office 鈥 is also planning to send a letter to legislative leaders outlining its legal concerns with rerouting the money away from its original purpose.


Earlier coverage:


Using opioid money for emergency shelter, police overtime

Ayotte, meanwhile, has proposed other changes to how the state spends its opioid settlement money. One provision, adopted in the House budget, would appropriate $10 million over two years for emergency shelter for people with substance use disorder.

Another 鈥 perhaps more controversially 鈥 would allow opioid abatement funds to cover police overtime costs for drug enforcement operations in northern New Hampshire. Ayotte, , has made beefing up law enforcement along the northern border a priority.

The House budget plan authorizes the state to use the settlement money for that purpose, but without specifying an amount 鈥 leaving it unclear how much of the fund could be spent on drug interdiction efforts. Ayotte initially proposed $1 million over two years.

The governor鈥檚 office did not answer questions about whether she consulted with the opioid commission on those proposals, or how specifically the money for emergency shelter would be used.

鈥淚n her budget, the Governor directed opioid abatement funds to be used for opioid interdiction efforts and opioid recovery programs,鈥 John Corbett, a spokesperson for Ayotte鈥檚 office, said in a statement. 鈥淭hese uses are aligned with the mission of the settlement fund.鈥

But members of the opioid abatement commission have expressed some technical concerns about whether the money can legally be used in that way.

'New Hampshire does not want to repeat the mistakes we made with the master settlement agreement for tobacco.'
Kate Frey, New Futures

The proposal also worries Rep. Jodi Newell, a Keene Democrat who became an advocate for treatment and recovery after losing her fiance to an overdose years ago and has worked on substance use policy in the Legislature. She argued that such spending runs counter to the intent of the settlement funds, which should prioritize expanding treatment and recovery programs 鈥 not diverting money to routine drug enforcement.

鈥淲e fund law enforcement. And part of their job is enforcing our laws around drug sales and drug use and those kind of things,鈥 Newell said. 鈥淭hat is part of their normal function. That is not what these funds are for.鈥

Newell, who does not sit on the opioid abatement commission, put forward an amendment to remove that and the other changes to the opioid fund from the budget before it passed, but the amendment failed in the House.

Frey, with New Futures, said it鈥檚 important to learn the lessons of the settlements with cigarette companies more than two decades ago. Little of that money went to tobacco prevention in the end 鈥 one reason the opioid settlements contain more stringent restrictions.

鈥淣ew Hampshire does not want to repeat the mistakes we made with the master settlement agreement for tobacco,鈥 she said.

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I report on health and equity for NHPR. My work focuses on questions about who is able to access health care in New Hampshire, who is left out, and how that affects their health and well-being. I want to understand the barriers that make it hard for people to get care 鈥 including financial barriers 鈥 and what people in power are or aren鈥檛 doing to make things better.

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If that matters to you, now is the time to give. Join the 50,000+ members powering honest reporting and a more connected 鈥 and civil! 鈥 海角换妻.

SOMOS CONNECTICUT is an initiative from 海角换妻, the state鈥檚 local NPR and PBS station, to elevate Latino stories and expand programming that uplifts and informs our Latino communities. Visit CTPublic.org/latino for more stories and resources. For updates, sign up for the SOMOS CONNECTICUT newsletter at ctpublic.org/newsletters.

SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de 海角换妻, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programaci贸n que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para m谩s reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscr铆base a nuestro bolet铆n informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

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You just read trusted, local journalism that鈥檚 free for everyone, thanks to donors like you.

If that matters to you, now is the time to give. Join the 50,000+ members powering honest reporting and a more connected 鈥 and civil! 鈥 海角换妻.

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