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The Cavalry: <br />ARORP and the Administration of Opioid Settlement Funds <br />In the Summer 2022 issue of County Lines, I wrote about the formation of the Arkansas Opioid <br />Recovery Partnership (ARORP, www.arorp.ors) and the hiring of Kirk Lane as ARORP <br />Director. Less than six months later, ARORP is bringing the cavalry to your communities, <br />families, and opioid addicts. ARORP has come so far already that this edition of County Lines <br />will also include an update from ARORP Director Lane and ARORP Deputy Director Tenesha <br />Barnes, about ARORP programs and projects that are already making a difference. We are very <br />excited to bring this wonderful news to you. <br />With this article, I will outline and summarize the important components of the process under <br />which ARORP receives funding proposals, reviews and analyzes proposals, and approves and <br />funds proposals, to abate the opioid epidemic in Arkansas. We have invested significant <br />brainpower and care to create a process that is both simple and evidence -driven; both thorough <br />and efficient. <br />In early September 2022, Arkansas cities and counties, through the Directors of the Arkansas <br />Municipal League (AML) and Association of Arkansas Counties (AAC), approved distribution <br />agreements that are incorporated as exhibits into the Arkansas Opioids Memorandum of <br />Understanding (MOU). The MOU, executed in July 2021 by the Governor, Attorney General, <br />AAC Director, and AML Director, includes an equal split of Arkansas settlement dollars among <br />the state, counties, and cities-1/3 of every Arkansas dollar is allocated to the state, 1/3 of every <br />Arkansas dollar is allocated to cities, and 1/3 of every Arkansas dollar is allocated to counties. <br />The county and city distribution agreements govern the distribution and use of settlement funds <br />designated for Arkansas counties and cities. Both the MOU and the distribution agreements are <br />posted on the ARORP website along with other important legal documents: <br />www.arorp.org/abo <br />Through the county and city distribution agreements, the counties and cities created ARORP, <br />and directed that their opioid settlement funds be disbursed by ARORP in a manner consistent <br />with requirements and restrictions contained in opioid settlement agreements and court orders. It <br />is extremely important to follow these requirements —most of the settlements include payment <br />streams across many years, and failure to follow the requirements of the settlements could <br />jeopardize future settlement payments. This is one reason we created a Qualified Settlement <br />Fund (QSF) through an Arkansas court, to provide court supervision of the process and ensure <br />the proper administration of the counties' and cities' settlement funds and opioid abatement <br />program. But while the QSF court supervises the settlement funds and the QSF administrator <br />manages the settlement funds, the administration of abatement funding is done by ARORP, as set <br />forth in the county and city distribution agreements. <br />The distribution agreements define the ARORP mission statement: "Evaluate proposals, make <br />recommendations, and empower evidence -based programs and strategies to abate the Arkansas <br />opioid epidemic, in a manner consistent with approved purposes as defined in the Arkansas <br />Opioids MOU, settlement agreements, and court orders approving settlements and bankruptcies." <br />Consistent with the MOU, the many settlement agreements and court orders, and the ARORP <br />mission statement, nine principles guide the work of ARORP. Each guiding principle is <br />thoughtful and important: <br />