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Before a recent spending push, CT sat on piles of opioid settlement cash, KFF study finds

FILE: 1,464 white flags were placed in New Britain's Walnut Hill Park in 2023, each flag marking the 1,464 people who fatally overdosed in 海角换妻 in 2022.
Mark Mirko
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海角换妻
FILE: 1,464 white flags were placed in New Britain's Walnut Hill Park in 2023, each flag marking the 1,464 people who fatally overdosed in 海角换妻 in 2022. 海角换妻 received 85 million dollars in opioid settlement funds from 2022 through 2023. But more than 80 million dollars of that money sat unspent in a bank account those two years, according to new data from the nonprofit K-F-F.

A national tracking the spending of opioid settlement funds found 海角换妻 and other states sat on millions of dollars of that money during 2022 and 2023.

The data, compiled by the nonprofit KFF Health News, found 海角换妻 received $85 million in opioid settlement funds in 2022 and 2023.

Of that money, $80.5 million was not spent or allocated by the state鈥檚 Opioid Settlement Advisory Committee, according to KFF.

鈥満=腔黄 is not the only one like this 鈥 West Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia,鈥 also followed suit, said Aneri Pattani of KFF.

鈥淵ou have people who look at that and say, there are $80 million sitting there while folks are dying on the street, while they couldn't get into treatment.鈥

CT accelerates opioid settlement spending in recent months

The KFF database was launched last December. Since then, 海角换妻 has stepped up the pace.

In January, the state鈥檚 settlement committee allocated $58.6 million 鈥 its largest allocation to date 鈥 to fund a new housing program for unhoused people with opioid use disorder.

海角换妻 was part of a nationwide effort to secure more than $50 billion to counter the opioid epidemic. From that, the state secured $600 million to support treatment, prevention and recovery.

In January, an additional $1.4 billion was added to a nationwide settlement with members of the Sackler family and their company Purdue Pharma, Inc, for its role in the opioid crisis.

Following that announcement, Nancy Navarretta, commissioner of 海角换妻鈥檚 Mental Health and Addiction Services, detailed how the state was already spending its settlement money.

鈥淧revious to this announcement, we've already put out $91.3 million out the door, with the help of my colleagues who are on the Opioid Settlement Advisory Committee,鈥 Navarretta said. 鈥淭hese initiatives will strengthen prevention, treatment, recovery and harm reduction efforts across the state.鈥

CT鈥檚 push to expand sterile syringe access 

In 海角换妻, about 20% of the state鈥檚 allocations went toward expanding syringe service programs.

In November 2023, the state鈥檚 settlement committee approved $500,000 to expand harm reduction supplies via seven agencies, including the 海角换妻 Harm Reduction Alliance. The move came after committee members and lawmakers expressed frustration over delays in allocating the funds.

Harm reduction agencies provide sterile needles to people with opioid use disorder, carry the fentanyl overdose reversal drug Naloxone, connect people to treatment and offer social supports, including housing.

Pattani, with KFF, noted 海角换妻鈥檚 push to make sterile syringes more widely available was not a national trend.

鈥淚t's one of the areas that public health officials recommend people spend this money,鈥 Pattani said. 鈥淗owever across the country, less than 2% of the opioid settlement funds that we tracked went towards syringe service programs.鈥

Sujata Srinivasan is 海角换妻 Radio鈥檚 senior health reporter. Prior to that, she was a senior producer for Where We Live, a newsroom editor, and from 2010-2014, a business reporter for the station.

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