Dayton Daily News

Addiction fighter advances in seeking funds

OneFifteen approved for the next phase of the state’s new process.

- By Chris Stewart Staff Writer

A proposal by a Dayton addiction treatment provider is among the first in the state to be approved by the Ohio Treasurer’s Office for a process that will allow it to seek state funding.

OneFifteen’s recovery project seeks to use $9.1 million over a three-year period to improve access to care, reduce the time individual­s spend in jail, help people stay in long-term recovery, reduce emergency department visits for overdoses and support long-term employment.

Verily Life Sciences, one of OneFifteen’s four founding partners, will provide the upfront funding for the project that will help as many as 1,500 adults, according to OneFifteen’s proposal.

OneFifteen’s proposal was one of five statewide projects that were deemed “Pay-for-Success Appropriat­e and Ready” and cleared the ResultsOHI­O screening, which makes sure programs “have the tools and vision” for success, said Ohio Treasurer Robert Sprague. The programs first must succeed using private funding

before taxpayer money picks up the tab.

“With issues like addiction, infant mortality and poverty gripping our communitie­s, we must find new ways to combat the most persistent challenges facing our state,” Sprague said. “ResultsOHI­O gives Ohio an avenue to do things differentl­y — to be bold — and put innovative ideas to the test.”

OneFifteen, which helps people overcome substance use disorders, seeks to expand its integrated and accessible care for individual­s at odds with the justice system in southwest Ohio.

“OneFifteen is thrilled to be able to move on to the next phase of the approval process,” said Marti Taylor, president and CEO.

Taylor said the novel process is a way to leverage both private and public resources to tackle challengin­g social and public health problems.

The next three to five months will be spent explaining OneFifteen’s proposal to legislator­s who could then be moved to include funding in the next state budget bill, Taylor said.

The other projects deemed “Pay-for-Success Appropriat­e and Ready” by the Ohio Treasurer’s Office are:

■ Cincinnati Works in Hamilton County aims to better address unemployme­nt and underemplo­yment with the goal of moving its members out of poverty.

■ Columbus Works in Franklin County seeks to expand career, life and financial coaching, job placement services and wraparound supports to individual­s as a means to address barriers to self-sufficienc­y.

■ Every Child Succeeds in Hamilton County that provides a year of home visiting services to high-risk pregnant women seeks to reduce preterm births.

■ Ohio Department of Higher Education proposes to deliver coaching services statewide to Ohio National Guard Scholarshi­p students prior to enrollment and during the first year of post-secondary education to encourage on-time graduation.

Nineteen proposals were submitted during the first round, according to Treasurer’s Office. In addition to the five deemed “Pay for Success Appropriat­e and Ready,” 10 were judged “Pay for Success Appropriat­e, but Not Ready,” and will be able to revise and resubmit applicatio­ns. Four were determined to be “Not Pay for Success Appropriat­e.”

In addition to the private sector, Sprague said upfront money for projects can also come philanthro­pic organizati­ons, community foundation­s and investment funds emphasizin­g social impact.

“There will be projects that fail, and the taxpayers aren’t on the hook for those,” Sprague said. “But for the ones that are successful, it will save people’s lives, they will improve their communitie­s and they will save the taxpayer’s dollars because now you have a program that works better and produces better results than what we had before.”

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