Jefferson County commissioners approved initial allocations from opioid settlement funds at their Nov. 7 meeting, directing a one-time $58,004.73 to court services for opioid remediation and $16,000 per year for five years to an "Acts of Justice" program in the prosecutor's office.
During discussion commissioners said they had delayed some distributions while finalizing a sustainable treatment approach inside the county jail. Commissioners and county leaders described a jail-based addiction treatment program (referred to in the meeting as JCAP) and said the county sought to ensure funding would support a sustained program rather than a short-term pilot. County officials said the city, the county and the Bethany Legacy Foundation collaborated on a plan to sustain treatment services.
A motion to approve the $58,004.73 allocation to court services and a separate motion to commit $16,000 annually for five years for the prosecutor's program were approved by voice vote; no roll-call tallies were read into the record.
During public comment a resident asked whether the county intended to form a designated advisory committee to distribute opioid settlement funds; commissioners said state guidance recommends a committee but does not require one and that the board has been vetting requests and prioritizing awards with a focus on the jail program first. Commissioners said they will continue evaluating requests and expect to make additional awards before year-end as funds and program needs are clarified.
Ending: County staff to continue evaluating grant requests and coordinate award disbursements, prioritizing program sustainability.