Wisconsin Health News

JFC modifies DHS’ plan for opioid settlement funds 

The Joint Finance Committee on Thursday unanimously signed off on a modified plan for spending $31 million in opioid settlement funds heading to the state this year.

The Department of Health Services submitted a plan for the funding in late July, but a committee objection in mid-August stopped it from moving forward.

The committee’s changes to the DHS plan include:

Sen. Jon Erpenbach, D-West Point, said the issue “hits home personally.” His 27-year-old daughter has overdosed at least once and has been in and out of the hospital multiple times.

“The fact that we sat on this money and didn’t get it out of the door, to me, there’s no explanation for it whatsoever,” Erpenbach said. “I didn’t want to say anything because I want to pass this and get the money out the door today, just get it to where it needs to be.”

Committee Co-Chair Rep. Mark Born, R-Beaver Dam, said the delay of a few weeks was worth it since they talked with groups, including those that worked in law enforcement, that said they weren’t contacted by DHS.

“I’ve had stakeholders directly tell me they hadn’t heard a damn thing from them,” he said.

He added that DHS “did some good work … but fell short working with some key community partners.”

Read the motion.

This article first appeared in the Wisconsin Health News daily email newsletter. Sign up for your free trial here.

Exit mobile version