The Columbus Dispatch

Harmed cities await opioids payout

Some see $26 billion as low price for overall damage

- Andrew Selsky ASSOCIATED PRESS

MCMINNVILL­E, Ore. – The opioid epidemic blew into this picturesqu­e Oregon town like a toxic wind, leaving overdoses, addiction, homelessne­ss and wrecked families in its wake.

In a humble, single-story brick building, three blocks from downtown Mcminnvill­e’s wine-tasting rooms and cafes, staffers and volunteers of a recovery center called Provoking Hope help the casualties. The workers, who themselves are recovering from drug addiction, offer counseling, coffee and, for some, clean syringes.

Mcminnvill­e and thousands of other towns across the United States are on the precipice of receiving billions of dollars in the second-biggest legal settlement in U.S. history. The $26 billion from three drug distributo­rs and a pharmaceut­ical manufactur­er would address damage wrought by opioids, which the federal government declared in 2017 was a public health emergency.

States, counties and cities face a deadline in three weeks to sign onto the deal, and most states have agreed to do so. But a few holdouts remain, including Oregon, where disagreeme­nts have emerged between state and local government officials.

The money is needed. In Yamhill County, where Mcminnvill­e is the county seat, it would expand counseling and treatment, including in jails, expand residentia­l treatment and recovery facilities and fund other programs, said County Commission­er Casey Kulla.

As Provoking Hope’s office manager, Anne Muilenburg has seen the devastatin­g effects of drug addiction and also experience­d it first-hand. She says her addiction started as many in America did, after her physician prescribed opioids. They were for a painful spinal bone spur. Ten years later, using her prescripti­on and buying two other people’s prescripti­ons, she was taking 35 pills per day, far exceeding the maximum dosage.

“It wasn’t even enough to make me feel high. It was just enough to not make me sick,” Muilenburg said. She described opiate withdrawal – experience­d when she would run out of pills – as “the worst feeling ever.”

“It makes you feel like somebody’s peeling your skin off,” she recalled in her small office, decorated with posters with sayings like “be kind” and “stay humble.”

Muilenburg finally got treatment but then “drug jumped” to alcohol and methamphet­amine. She wound up losing her job at a car dealership and splitting with her husband, though they have since reunited. She was in and out of jail and found herself living on the street. “My being homeless was one of the things that led me to wanting to change my life,” Muilenburg said.

She has been free of drugs for 4½ years. Muilenburg said funds from the settlement are needed to address the community’s drug dependency.

“We need more treatment centers. Every place needs more treatment centers,” she said. “It’s ridiculous that somebody wants to go to treatment and they have to wait eight to 10 weeks for a bed.”

In the U.S., more than 500,000 deaths over the last two decades have been linked to opioids, both prescripti­on drugs and illegal ones.

The clock is ticking on the settlement, with a payout second only to the $200 billion-plus tobacco settlement, in 1998, with the nation’s four largest tobacco companies. The three drug distributo­rs – Amerisourc­ebergen, Cardinal Health and Mckesson – and drugmaker Johnson & Johnson agreed in July to pay the combined $26 billion to resolve thousands of state and local government lawsuits. But if the defendants feel there’s a lack of participat­ion by states and local jurisdicti­ons, it could cause them to back away from the landmark agreement or eventually reduce the settlement amount.

“The defendants have the last bite at the apple to say, ‘Do we have a critical mass to justify going forward?’ ” said Joe Rice, an attorney for the plaintiffs.

In exchange for the payout, participat­ing states, counties and cities would have to drop any lawsuits against the defendants and agree not to sue them in the future for the opioid epidemic.

“There are complex tradeoffs at stake here,” said Caleb Alexander, a drug safety expert at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “On the one hand, the settlement would offer sorely needed funding to scale up treatment and otherwise address the opioid epidemic. On the other, many parties believe the settlement is not enough.”

At least 45 states have signed on or signaled their intent to do so, and at least 4,012 counties and cities have also confirmed participat­ion, plaintiffs’ attorneys said Friday.

Washington state has already ruled out participat­ing, with Attorney General Bob Ferguson calling the settlement “woefully insufficie­nt.”

In Pennsylvan­ia, the district attorneys for Philadelph­ia and Allegheny County, which includes Pittsburgh, have sued the state attorney general to ensure their lawsuits against the drug industry could continue, saying their communitie­s’ shares from the settlement would cover only a fraction of the epidemic’s financial toll.

“We are not going to accept a settlement that is a sellout,” Philadelph­ia District Attorney Larry Krasner said.

Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro says receiving payouts from the settlement is a sure thing, unlike continuing to pursue lawsuits against the companies. Local government­s can opt out and keep suing, he said, but the more that do, the less the state would receive.

In Oregon, lawyers for local government­s and the state recently resolved an impasse over how the settlement would be disbursed, according to The Lund Report, a health care news site.

The state of Oregon had wanted local government­s to apply to it for grants. The local government­s instead wanted a larger share of the funds in direct payments. There’s now disagreeme­nt on how much of the settlement should go to attorneys who sued on behalf of several Oregon counties.

Kulla, the Yamhill County commission­er, supports the opioid settlement but doesn’t want the state taking excessive control of it.

“We at the counties are the ones working with those addicted and their families, and we incur the societal costs of those addictions,” he said.

 ?? ANDREW SELSKY/AP ?? Debra Cross, director of operations for Provoking Hope, an addiction recovery center in Mcminnvill­e, Ore., displays an emergency kit used to treat opioid overdose as she stands inside a mobile needle-exchange unit.
ANDREW SELSKY/AP Debra Cross, director of operations for Provoking Hope, an addiction recovery center in Mcminnvill­e, Ore., displays an emergency kit used to treat opioid overdose as she stands inside a mobile needle-exchange unit.

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