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State Opioid Settlement Spending Decisions: Delaware

This information was compiled based on information from publicly available legislation, state memorandums or executive orders, state websites, and press releases, as well as supplemental interviews with state officials with a role in administering opioid settlement funding.

It offers a snapshot of settlement spending and priorities at the state level (e.g., funding administered by state agencies or designated statewide abatement funds) as well as laws, agreements, and processes that the state has established for allocating funds. NASHP does not track spending at the local or county level, but includes any relevant state-level reports or dashboards that capture local spending within a state. For details on the definitions used here, check out the definitions at the bottom of this page. You can also get an overview of opioid settlement decisions in all states.

Settlement Spending Status

Background

The Delaware Prescription Opioid Settlement Distribution Commission, tasked with outlining recommendations to the state Behavioral Health Consortium for use of state settlement funds as well as overseeing funding, operates the Prescription Opioid Settlement Tracker, which features approved funding distributions and breaks down payments based on awardee, date, and amount. The commission also publishes an annual report explaining settlement-related processes and outlining yearly expenditures. In 2023, the commission announced two rounds of grant recipients from the Abatement Accounts Fund. 

Has the state awarded settlement funds?

Yes. According to the settlement tracker, the state has awarded over $15 million in settlement funding — of the awardees, the Delaware Center for Justice and the Delaware Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health have received the largest amounts of funding. Separate from the tracker, grant award summaries (Phase 1A and Phase 1B) include more specific information, such as the organization’s name, award amount, and a project description.

Has the state announced priorities or recommendations for spending?

Yes. Delaware’s Grant Award Priorities for 2023 highlights seven priority categories for grant awards, providing specific examples of initiatives to fund for each of these categories. Investment examples come from those outlined in Exhibit E of the Distributor Settlement Agreement approved uses. Some of the priority categories include harm reduction, primary and secondary prevention, workforce development, and research and data collection.

Previous spending details

Not applicable.

Statewide reporting of local spending

Not applicable.

Process for Settlement Disbursement

Legislation creates a Prescription Opioid Settlement Distribution Commission to provide spending recommendations to the state’s Behavioral Health Consortium, which has the power to make distributions from the fund.

State and Political Subdivision Split

Structure

Abatement-Fund Controlled (>50 percent of funding controlled by statewide abatement fund)

Allocation Formula

100 percent Abatement Accounts Fund for Delaware

Role of Advisory Committee

The Prescription Opioid Settlement Distribution Commission makes recommendations to the Behavioral Health Consortium.

State Overviews

Explore each state's settlement spending progress and priorities, as well as available information on settlement-related laws, agreements, reports, and spending dashboards. Use the dropdown below to see details for each state. You can also see an overview of opioid settlement decisions in all states.

Awarded settlement funds: A designated state agency or statewide opioid abatement fund has published its intention to allocate a dollar amount to a specific abatement program, activity, strategy, service, or support OR an appropriation of settlement funds has been made through a legislative process. Due to the nature of budgeting and procurement processes, this funding could be in the process of being budgeted, obligated, expended, or disbursed.

Published general priorities or recommendations to guide spending: A state agency, abatement council, or advisory council has published priority areas of focus or recommended strategies to address the opioid crisis with settlement dollars but may or may not have allocated settlement funding yet.

Statewide reporting of local spending: NASHP will not be tracking every spending example at the local level, but this category includes states that have published dashboards or reports that include local expenditures.

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