Michigan’s Opioid Settlements
Last updated
© Vital Strategies and OpioidSettlementTracker.com
Last updated
This Community Guide will describe how Michigan is spending its opioid settlements and whether Michigan is working to ensure community access to opioid settlement funds. Last revised September 1, 2024.
Ultimate Decisionmaker
(within parameters established by the )
Local officials for counties, cities, and townships
Decision-making Process
The Michigan state legislature appropriates funds from the state share with non-binding recommendations from the (OAC).
Funds from this share are typically appropriated to the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS), then distributed to state agencies and other entities. MDHHS may consult the and/or the .
Localities decide autonomously
Supplantation
Prohibited
Not prohibited
Grant Funding
Yes. See .
Up to each locality (availability and processes will vary)
Public Input
Yes (public comment required at OAC and Opioid Task Force meetings). See also and .
Generally, yes (public comments required at public meetings)
Advisory Body
Yes (required). See the and .
Neither body is required to include member(s) with lived and/or living experience.
Up to each locality (not required)
Expenditures
No public reporting required (only intrastate), but see Michigan’s page, which publishes state-level investments and links to annual reports.
Neither public nor intrastate reporting required
But see counties’ spending plans on the Michigan Assoc. of Counties’ .
Updates
For updates on the state share, visit the OAC’s and the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services’ (MDHHS) page. You can also subscribe to OAC meeting notifications by emailing this address: and sign up for updates from the Opioid Task Force .
For updates on the local share, visit the Michigan Assoc. of Counties’ , which describes counties’ funded plans and strategies, and the Michigan Attorney General’s website, which contains an section describing certain localities’ uses of funds.
Another way to find updates on the local share is to check the websites for your county commission, city council, or local health department. See, e.g., the opioid settlement-specific websites maintained by , , , and .
$1.61 billion[1]
[1] Total is rounded. See The Official Opioid Settlement Tracker Tally. Accessed September 1, 2024.
50% to the state and 50% to local governments
State-Local Agreements (Michigan State-Subdivision Agreement for Allocation of Distribution Settlement Agreement and Janssen Settlement Agreement; Michigan State-Subdivision Agreement for Allocation of Allergan, Teva, CVS, Walmart, and Walgreens Settlement Agreements); Legislation (Mich. Comp. Laws Serv. Secs. 4.1850, 4.1851, 12.253); Executive Order (Executive Order 2022-12)