Opioid Settlement Funds at Work
The Town is putting funds received through the Commonwealth’s settlement with producers and distributors of opioids to work for the benefit of our community.
The Town has received over $74,000 in abatement funds and has entered into contracts with three local organizations to provide programs and services that fill identified community needs.
Recovery Coach Kelly Connolly has begun holding office hours at the Police Station, 249 George Ryder Road, every Wednesday from noon to 4 p.m. and is also available by phone at 774-209-3230 during those hours. Kelly can assist individuals seeking recovery from substance use and alcohol use disorders to achieve the most positive health, wellness, and recovery outcomes. Kelly’s position is made possible by abatement funding for three years and is provided by Outer Cape Health Recovery Services. The Recovery Coach program accepts all participants regardless of insurance status. If you or someone you know would benefit from these services, please reach out to Kelly.
Fishing Partnership Support Services (FP) is also committed to mitigating the detrimental impacts of the opioid epidemic, particularly in fishing communities, which have been hard hit by opioid use disorder. The Town has contracted with FP for one year to conduct at least one annual Opioid Overdose and Naloxone Distribution (OEND) training with enhanced CPR/First Aid course on Cape, to translate OEND and opioid use disorder materials into multiple languages including but not limited to Spanish and Brazilian-Portuguese, and to provide continued professional development of an FP Cape Cod Navigator to learn best practices for OEND training to support the local community.
Behavioral Health Innovators, Inc. provides the Positive Alternative To School Suspension (PASS) program to Monomoy Regional High School. For the 2023-2024 school year the PASS Supervisor has been tasked with developing a PASS program for Middle School students and will be engaging with the Monomoy Regional School District to offer that program locally. Additionally, Behavioral Health Innovators, Inc. has been tapped by the Career Education Coordinator at Monomoy High School to train students as mentors to 6th graders to help educate them about why substance use is dangerous and how it can negatively impact their futures. The abatement funding from the Town will support this work for this school year.
As additional settlement funds are received over the next 17 years, the Opioid Funds Working Group, made up of representatives from the Town’s Police, Fire, Health, and Community Services Departments and local mental health and human service professionals, will evaluate current and emerging community needs and identify programs and services to best meet those needs.