Grant County commissioners voted to join a regional opioid remediation collaborative during their Sept. 11 meeting, agreeing to participate with several neighboring rural counties in a coordinated approach to opioid prevention, treatment navigation and recovery supports.
County Manager Webb told commissioners the collaborative, already formed by seven rural counties, uses pooled opioid-remediation dollars to build an evidence-based treatment navigation system, coordinate 988 warm hand-offs, deploy Narcan training and support medication-assisted treatment (MAT) programs in detention centers. Webb said collaborative members have also developed a school-based prevention curriculum and are exploring supportive housing and transportation solutions.
Commission discussion was brief and broadly supportive. Commissioners praised an educational briefing held earlier and noted the collaborative’s focus on youth prevention and on improving access to MAT in detention settings. The board approved a motion to request county participation; commissioners did not specify a dollar amount in the motion during the meeting record.
Webb said the collaborative allows each county to prioritize its own spending within shared strategies so rural counties can “get bigger bang for their buck” by centralizing navigation and training functions while tailoring local investments.
The request to join was approved by majority vote; county staff will complete any enrollment paperwork and coordinate next steps with existing collaborative members.