Commissioners consider opioid-settlement and other local funds to shore up treatment-court shortfalls
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Summary
Fremont County commissioners discussed using opioid settlement funds and other local sources to support treatment-court programs if judicial-branch awards or state appropriations fall short; staff suggested opioid-settlement line items might fund prevention or services if programs meet settlement criteria.
Commissioners pressed judicial-branch staff on options to bridge potential gaps between projected program needs and anticipated grant awards.
An unnamed participant suggested opioid-settlement funds could be a suitable source for prevention or county program line items if the program meets settlement criteria and the county explicitly budgets the line item. "I think that would be a good place to take it to as a prevention group," an unnamed participant said when the commission discussed Eagles Hope and other local providers.
Commissioners and staff emphasized constraints on supplanting — county officials said they will consult the treasurer and ensure any settlement or local dollars do not improperly replace required grant matches. Staff also said they had explored interim clinical-supervisor arrangements and telehealth partnerships (providers in Casper and Lehi) to reduce staffing gaps while the county seeks longer-term hires.
The commission agreed to prepare program participant counts and treatment descriptions to support possible opioid-settlement requests and to return with a revised county funding letter if commissioners want alternative local funding lines identified.
Ending: Staff will coordinate with the county treasurer and opioid-settlement administrators to determine eligibility and, if appropriate, prepare a line-item request tied to program services.

