How Wake County’s Opioid Settlement Funds Have Been Spent

Wake County has received over $20 million since 2022 in national settlement funds from drug makers and pharmaceutical companies accused of worsening the opioid epidemic. The county will get over $55.6 million more in the next 14 years. 

Like other local governments in North Carolina, Wake County must spend the money on efforts to combat the opioid epidemic. Spending plans are made public at ncopioidsettlement.org

So, how has Wake County spent the money so far? Here’s what we found. 

Wake County didn’t spend any of its settlement funds in FY22 or FY23. In FY24, the board of commissioners approved about $5 million in spending, but the county only ended up spending a little over $260,000. The board approved another $12 million in spending in FY25 and hasn’t yet published a spending report from that year.

Actual spending

Date Provider Amount Description
FY22 N/A $0 N/A
FY23 N/A $0 N/A
FY24 SouthLight Healthcare

Healing Transitions

Unknown (Wake County?)

Unknown

Total

$128,900.13

$38,475.38

$92,804.28

$496.13

$260,675.92

Medication for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD) in the Wake County Detention Center
Recovery support services (peer support for the rapid responder program)

Collaborative strategic planning

Evidency-based addiction treatment

Note: These numbers come from Wake County’s annual financial reports cataloged in the CORE-NC Document Library.

Authorized spending

Date Provider Amount Description
3/20/2023 Not listed $1,700,000

$600,000

$1,200,000

$750,000

$600,000

$175,000

Evidence-based addiction treatment

Recovery support services

Care navigation

Housing access and support

Early identification and intervention

Collaborative strategic planning

4/15/2024 Not listed Collaborative strategic planning

Evidence-based addiction treatment

Recovery support services

Recovery housing support

Early identification and intervention

Naloxone distribution 

Criminal justice diversion programs 

Addiction treatment for incarcerated individuals

1/20/2025 Not listed Collaborative strategic planning

Evidence-based addiction treatment

Recovery support services

Recovery housing support

Early identification and intervention

Naloxone distribution 

Criminal justice diversion programs 

Addiction treatment for incarcerated individuals

Note: These numbers come from Wake County’s spending authorization reports cataloged in the CORE-NC Document Library.

Source link

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top