Massachusetts’ Opioid Settlements
Last updated
© Vital Strategies and OpioidSettlementTracker.com
Last updated
This Community Guide will describe how Massachusetts is spending its opioid settlements and whether Massachusetts] is working to ensure community access to opioid settlement funds. Last revised September 1, 2024.
$974.9 million[1]
[1] Total is rounded. See The Official Opioid Settlement Tracker Tally. Accessed September 1, 2024.
State-Local Agreement (Massachusetts State-Subdivision Agreement for Statewide Opioid Settlements); Legislation (Mass. Ann. Laws ch. 10, Sec. 35OOO)
Ultimate Decisionmaker
Local officials for towns, cities, and counties
Decision-making Process
The Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) decides specific expenditures from the Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund with recommendations from the Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund Advisory Council.
Municipalities decide autonomously (but those receiving at least $35,000 per year must report spending to the state)
Supplantation
Prohibited
Prohibited
Grant Funding
Yes. See Apply for a Grant from Mosaic Opioid Recovery Partnership (RIZE Massachusetts).
Up to each locality (availability and processes will vary)
Public Input
No opportunities available (not required)
Up to each municipality (not required)
Advisory Body
Yes (required). See the Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund Advisory Council.
The Council is required to include member(s) with lived and/or living experience.
Up to each municipality (not required)
Expenditures
Public reporting required. View the Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund’s annual reports here.
Public reporting required. See the Municipal Opioid Abatement Funds Data Dashboard.
Updates
For updates on the Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund share, visit the Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund Advisory Council’s website, which includes details on upcoming meetings.
To find updates on the local share, a good starting point is to check the websites for your municipality’s governing body, local board of health, or local health department. See also individual municipalities’ opioid settlement-specific websites, e.g., Boston, Falmouth, Fall River, and Framingham.