Chattanooga Times Free Press

Opioid settlement challenge reaches high court

- BY JILL NOLIN Read more at GeorgiaRec­order.com.

A rural south Georgia hospital authority is challengin­g a 2022 state law that barred local officials from suing opioid manufactur­ers and distributo­rs.

The hospital authority of Wayne County filed its federal lawsuit seeking damages in the spring of 2019 for the strain put on the Wayne Memorial Hospital in Jesup, which is about 40 miles northwest of Brunswick.

Wayne County, which is home to about 31,000 people, had an opioid-involved overdose rate — 23 per 100,000 — that was higher than the state average of 16.8 in 2021, according to the most recent annual report compiled by the state Department of Public Health. It also had a higher-than-average number of emergency room visits for opioid overdoses that year.

But the state had filed its own lawsuit against opioid manufactur­ers and distributo­rs a few months before Wayne County Hospital Authority’s claim, and it took the pharmaceut­ical companies to court while also participat­ing in multistate settlement negotiatio­ns that ultimately led to a $26 billion deal.

The 2022 law blocking local government­s from filing their own lawsuits was passed as part of the terms of those negotiatio­ns as a way to resolve the lawsuits filed by thousands of government­al plaintiffs nationally. In Georgia, all but two litigating government­al entities — the Wayne County Hospital Authority and the Bibb County School District — opted to participat­e.

The pharmaceut­ical companies are now trying to have the Georgia rural hospital authority’s lawsuit tossed out, pointing to Georgia’s state law. And the question of where that leaves the local authority landed before the Georgia Supreme Court, which heard oral arguments in the case Tuesday. A ruling will come later.

Robert Smith, an attorney for the hospital authority, argued the law is unconstitu­tional because the local body is essentiall­y a private corporatio­n.

“They had rights that existed — constituti­onal rights — that can’t be taken away,” Smith said to the justices Tuesday.

Some of the justices questioned the logic of the argument.

“Are you arguing that because the General Assembly gave to hospital authoritie­s, in some circumstan­ces, private rights, they are people and because the Constituti­on talks about people, they now have constituti­onal rights, even though the authority that was granted to them was by statute?” asked Justice Sarah Hawkins Warren.

“Correct, they have rights the same as a private corporatio­n,” Smith replied.

Former Chief Justice Harold Melton, who stepped down in 2021, represente­d the pharmaceut­ical companies before his former colleagues. The state Attorney General’s Office, which negotiated the settlement agreement, is also asking the court to end the local hospital authority’s attempt to go it alone.

Attorney General Chris Carr announced last January that the state of Georgia had joined the $26 billion multistate settlement agreement with Cardinal, McKesson and Amerisourc­eBergen — the nation’s three major pharmaceut­ical distributo­rs — and opioid manufactur­er and marketer Johnson & Johnson.

The state is expected to receive $636 million through the agreement.

Carr has argued the statelevel approach would enable Georgia to maximize the amount of relief gleaned from opioid makers and marketers who are accused of downplayin­g the addictive nature of the drugs and ignoring suspicious levels of consumptio­n of their product.

“Not only does the status of millions in funding for the state hang in the balance, but the state’s ability to meaningful­ly join settlement­s is at issue,” the state wrote in its brief to the state Supreme Court.

“If the state cannot speak with one voice, then no private party will be able to trust the state’s word, even when it is written into a statute. Sign an agreement with the state today, get sued by a rogue municipali­ty tomorrow.”

Opioid overdoses remain high nationally. In Georgia, there were 2,390 drug overdose deaths in 2021, and 71% were attributed to opioids and 57% to fentanyl, according to the Department of Public Health.

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