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Watch: AG Yost announces opioid settlement agreement with Ohio communities

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WKBN) – Ohio has forged an $808 million agreement with the three largest distributors of opioids.

The money will be used by communities “ravaged by the addiction crisis, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced today.

“This is a historic day for Ohio,” Yost said during an afternoon press conference. “We have $800 million coming to Ohio to fix this mess – what lawyers call ‘abatement.’”

The settlement makes good on Yost’s promise to partner with local governments to fight the opioid epidemic.

“With this resolution, we have some important controls and monitoring provisions in place to help protect Ohioans and its communities from the reckless distribution and over-prescriptions that we have seen in previous years,” he said.

Under the agreement, Ohio cities and counties will begin receiving compensation as early as November, and the money is guaranteed even if the national agreement doesn’t come to fruition.

The settlement, which is scheduled to be paid over 18 years, also calls for a continuous annual flow of settlement money, meaning that the distributors can pay extra in a given year, but that additional money will come off the back end so that there is no disruption of payments.

Ohio was among the very first states to sue the distributors and manufacturers of opioids.

OneOhio has been be incorporated into the settlement, with 85 percent of the settlement money targeted for local distribution:

In addition to the monetary settlement, Cardinal, McKesson and AmerisourceBergen must also make significant internal changes to help prevent a similar crisis.

The three companies must:

From 2010 to 2019, opioid overdoses claimed the lives of more than 23,700 Ohioans, with countless others having had their lives and/or communities torn apart by opioid addiction.

Tragically, opioid overdose deaths nationwide rose last year to a record 93,000, nearly a 30 percent increase over the previous year. During the second quarter of 2020 in Ohio, 11 of every 100,000 people died of an opioid overdose, the state’s highest mortality rate at any point during the epidemic.