Council hears limited opioid-settlement payments; funds earmarked for remediation programs

3396446 ยท May 8, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Finance staff told the council the city will receive $48,002.91 this year from Janssen and Distributor settlements to be distributed equally over 13 years, and that Kroger settlement distributions are pending; the funds must be used for opioid remediation efforts and are expected to provide modest annual amounts.

City finance staff briefed councilmembers at a budget workshop on the city's opioid settlement fund, saying the city will receive two awards this year totaling $48,002.91 from Janssen and Distributor settlements to be disbursed equally over the next 13 years.

Staff also said the city is part of a Kroger settlement and signed required documents last July but has not yet received distribution projections for that agreement. For the current budget, staff modeled only the two Janssen/Distributor payments because Kroger's payout schedule is not yet available.

Finance staff emphasized that opioid settlement money is restricted to opioid-remediation purposes. "The funds for this can only be used for opioid remediation efforts," staff said, and noted the amounts are relatively small on an annual basis: "You might be talking 1,200 to 1,400 a year," a presenter said when estimating what the settlement payments could provide annually.

Staff suggested the fund should accumulate until it is large enough to support a meaningful remediation project such as education, training, or community take-back events, rather than being spent on small, recurring items. Councilmembers acknowledged the constraint and that the fund likely will grow slowly over the 13-year distribution window.