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City and County plan joint public dashboard, warn data gaps will limit early reporting
Summary
Bernalillo County and the City of Albuquerque presented a plan to build a jointly maintained public dashboard for opioid-settlement funds, but staff warned that gaps in statewide and provider data will limit early metrics and urged patience while reporting systems are built.
Bernalillo County and the City of Albuquerque told the Local Government Coordinating Council on Thursday that they will jointly design and host a public dashboard showing opioid-settlement allocations, payments and spending — and that meaningful performance metrics will follow only after additional data work.
Deputy County Manager for Behavioral Health Wayne Lindstrom and Ellen Braden, deputy director for Health, Housing and Homelessness for the City of Albuquerque, outlined a phased plan that starts with simple financial reporting and moves toward a program-level accountability matrix. Lindstrom said the dashboard will appear on both entities’ public portals and that the city, county and Albuquerque Public Schools must designate staff to participate in planning.
The presentations emphasized why…
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