As crisis rages, Michigan speeds up opioid spending in new budget
- Michigan will spend $48 million from opioid settlement funds on addiction services next year
- The appropriation in the budget approved Thursday represents a big increase from past spending
- One Michigander dies every four hours from an opioid-related overdose
Michigan lawmakers have approved $48.2 million to fight the opioid epidemic, more than doubling the amount the state’s health department had planned to spend in the coming budget year.
The funds will go to prevention, treatment and recovery services around the state, including $10 million to regional community mental health services and $2 million to Michigan’s federally recognized tribes.
The spending, included in the 2024-25 budget approved early Thursday, comes from settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors who were deemed to be partly responsible for the explosion of opioids that now kill close to 3,000 Michiganders a year.
The appropriations mean the state has already spent, or has plans to spend, about 63% of the $123 million in settlement funds it received through the end of 2023, with more checks arriving over the course of 18 years. That’s a massive increase from the 23% that had been spent as of the end of 2023.
Chelsea Wuth, spokesperson for the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, said the funds "will help us implement the recommendations of the Opioid Task Force to improve prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery services and will continue our work to improve the lives and outcomes of vulnerable Michiganders and their families affected, making our state safer and more equitable for all."
All told, Michigan will receive about $1.6 billion, with about half going directly to counties, cities and townships, and the rest to the state, where officials can choose how to distribute.
Related:
- Millions to help opioid users still unspent in half of Michigan’s counties
- Michigan aims to remedy ‘egregious injustice,' as tribes shut out of opioid funds
- One of Michigan’s top doctors hid a secret from everyone. His drug addiction
- How is the state spending its opioid settlement funds? Read our series here.
State officials have been cautious to spend down the funds, arguing it was best to stretch out the resources over more years. That approach has been blasted by many drug treatment advocates in a series of articles in Bridge Michigan, warning that Michigan residents are dying at a pace of one every four hours while money for additional services sits in the bank.
The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services proposed spending $23.2 million in settlement funds in the budget year that begins in October. The Legislature approved that spending, and tacked on an additional $25 million from the settlement funds.
Local governments, too, have been hesitant to spend the money quickly, as local policymakers try to decide the best use of funds. About half of the state’s counties have yet to spend a dime of their funds, according to a recent survey by the Michigan Association of Counties.
Included in the budget was $2 million for Michigan’s tribes. Earlier this month, Bridge wrote that the state had not shared settlement funds with the state’s tribes other than through competitive grants, despite the fact that, nationally, Native Americans have the highest overdose death rate among ethnicities. Several other states have distributed funds to their local tribes.
The budget, approved early Thursday, also spotlighted a priority of establishing more recovery housing, including, among other services, setting aside $3 million to help expand Andy’s Place.
The Jackson-based recovery housing complex is more than a residential structure. Rather, Andy’s Place also provides peer recovery coaches who live onsite, community spaces for recovery meetings and office space for community organizations that can connect residents to jobs, mental health help and other services.
The state funds will “save lives,” by expanding the current 50-unit complex for single adults and families, adding another complex on the same site for pregnant residents, said Mike Hirst, whose son, Andy, died of an overdose.
He called it a “big win” in addressing Michigan’s opioid crisis, building out opportunities for long-time recovery by “creating a safe, secure environment where everyone is working toward the same thing.
Lingering frustrations
But the larger state budget “disappointed” Dr. Cara Poland, chairperson of the Opioid Advisory Commission.
She and other members in recent months have been increasingly frustrated, saying the commission’s spending recommendations and questions have been repeatedly ignored.
The proposed budget fails to set aside money for a needs assessment, which would identify gaps in services across the state — a core responsibility of the commission, she said.
That breaks the 2022 state law that established the commission, charging it with conducting a needs assessment and using it to advise the legislature each year how best to spend the funds, Poland said.
Poland, a long-time addiction specialist who now helps oversee addiction training for other clinicians, said she and other commission members are considering an end to meeting, wondering – she said – “whether there is value to continuing to meet.”
The Opioid Task Force, established by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and housed within the state health department, also makes recommendations on spending.
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